Ramadan brings exuberant displays of piety among Malays, consumed as we are with personal salvation. There is, however, little reflection on our salvation as a society.
Hellfire or the ultimate punishment for us as a society would be to be dumped into the rubbish bin of mankind, dependent on the charity of others while living in a land so blessed by Almighty.
The irony, as well as the fact that others thrive in Tanah Melayu, would make the punishment that much more unbearable.
We have ruled this country for more than half a century. All instruments of government are in our hands, sultans as well as prime ministers are all Malays, and the constitution is generous to us. Yet we remain in a sorry state, reduced to lamenting our fate and blaming the pendatang.
This lamentation is heard with nauseating frequency, coming from sultans and prime ministers to pundits and kedai kopi commentators. Seizing on that, some (and not just non-Malays) gleefully trumpet their own sense of superiority or denigrate the Malay culture and character.
A former Terengganu menteri besar, a predominantly-Malay and oil-rich state, asked how could we, who have lived here for centuries, control the government, and are in the majority feel threatened by the immigrants. The fact that he posed the question reveals how clueless he was in addressing it. Alas his is the calibre of leadership we have been cursed with.
The issue is not who is in charge rather what those charged with leading us are doing. The Pakistanis and Zimbabweans are in charge 100% and have no immigrants to contend with, yet their people suffer.
The Chinese in Hong Kong thrived under British rule while their brethren on the mainland starved and died under Mao’s Cultural Revolution and other “Great Leap Forward” follies. Being led by your own kind is not always a blessing.
As for immigrants, the French, Germans and Americans are much richer and in full control of their nations yet they feel threatened by poor and unarmed Africans, Turks and Mexicans respectively.
Leaders betraying their followers’ trust or natives feeling threatened by immigrants is not unique to Malays.
In an earlier book, Malaysia in the Era of Globalisation, I likened the dilemma we face today to that of the Irish of yore.
The Irish then felt overwhelmed by the minority English who dominated just about every aspect of life in Ireland, except of course the Catholic Church. The church, meanwhile, held a tight grip on the Irish, dictating everything from what they could do in their bedrooms to the schools their children should attend.
As the church banned contraception, they had huge unruly broods, with the fathers busy rebelling or drinking. If there were ambitious Irish parents who dared send their children to the much superior English schools instead of the lousy church-run ones, they risked being excommunicated. More Irish left Ireland than stayed.
Substitute Islam for Catholicism and non-Malays for the English, and we have our current mess, except that we are not emigrating en mass. As for the Irish blight of alcohol and fecundity, we have drugs and HIV infections.
Ireland today is different nation. The Irish are no longer emigrating and the country hosts many IT giants. Ryan Air, the Dublin-based discount airline, once attempted a takeover of venerable British Airways.
We can learn much from the Irish, their recent economic setbacks notwithstanding. We can begin by choosing enlightened leaders, meaning, those who can crystallise the problems and then craft sensible solutions instead of endlessly extolling the mythical values of Ketuanan Melayu or mindlessly quoting the Holy Book.
Ireland’s transformational leader Sean Lemass began by clipping the powers of the church. He removed schools from its control and allowed contraceptives. He lifted censorship so the Irish could read dissenting opinions and view on their television sets the world beyond their government’s propaganda.
Irish children studied science and mathematics instead of reciting catechism. With family planning, the unruly messy Irish brood was replaced by a more wholesome and manageable one.
We have our share of potential Lemasses but we do not nurture or elect them. Our leaders instead are consumed in a destructive and dysfunctional dynamics of triangulation, with one element attempting alliance with the second to neutralise the third.
Earlier, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad co-opted the religious to take on the third – the sultans. Today’s weakened political leadership emboldens the sultans to re-exert themselves by aligning with the ulama.
Seemingly progressive Perak’s sultan gives free rein to his Taliban-like mufti while Kelantan’s is more imam than sultan, enrapturing Malay hearts. Elsewhere sultans could not find enough ulama to heap royal honours.
These sultans and politicians have yet to learn a crucial lesson. The Islamic tiger, once ridden, is impossible to dismount. You would be lucky if it would not take you back to its den. Meanwhile, you have to endure where it wants to go, and right now it is headed for Isis.
Only the emergence of other pillars of leadership could break this dysfunctional triangulation. A potential source would be non-governmental organisations: Bersih’s considerable impact attests to this.
Another would be for “towering” Malays to be assertive, especially those not tainted by politics, religion, or royalty. Consider that cartoonist Zunar and national laureate Datuk A. Samad Said have more impact than the much-touted Group of 25 “eminent” Malays comprising retired senior civil servants.
For a Malay to reach the top in the civil service is no achievement, it would be for a non-Malay. Thus those 25 “eminent” Malays, despite or perhaps because of their fancy royal titles, are not effective role models or catalysts for change
Barring disruption of this destructive triangulation or the emergence of a local Lemass, there is not much hope except to pray.
However, as per the oft-quoted Quranic verse, Allah will not change the condition of a people unless they themselves do it (approximate translation). Our Prophet Muhammad advised us that we must first tie our camel securely and only then pray it does not escape.
Pray we must, but first we have to get rid of Jawi, Jakim (Selangor Islamic Religious Department) and hordes of similar and expensive agencies. I could tolerate them as public works programmes for otherwise unemployable Malays, but those authoritarian and far-from-authoritative government-issued ulama are intent on controlling our lives a la Irish priests of yore.
I would then divert those saved funds, as well as the billions in zakat so generously donated by our people, to improve our schools and universities. Make our religious schools and colleges more like those in the United States.
Catholic schools there like California’s Bellarmine and universities like Indiana’s Notre Dame produce their share of American scientists, engineers and entrepreneurs. They also attract outstanding students and faculty from other faiths.
Had that former MB dispensed with his Monsoon Cup and ostentatious crystal mosque and instead used the funds to improve his schools, he would have found the answer to his question. – TMI
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