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History & heritage Photography Society

[1637] Of reducing Article 160 to absurdity

Farish Noor is one of those individuals whom are able to open a door that I never thought was there in the first. At a public lecture of his which coincided with the Kuala Lumpur Alternative Book Fair today, he opened a door for me which I thought I had opened earlier. As it turned out, I did not open the door as wide as I should have.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams.

Farish Noor delivering a public lecture at Central Market, Kuala Lumpur.

Over a year ago, I asked why the sanctioned history of Malaysia — practically the history of the Malays in this country — began only with the establishment of the Sultanate of Malacca, despite the fact that there were prominent states — especially Srivijaya — that existed well before Malacca. There is, in my opinion, too much stress on Malacca and too little emphasis granted to earlier history of this region. I went on to suggest that religion is the answer but the answer is long-winded.

At the public lecture which concerned itself with the beginning of racial classification in Malaya, Farish Noor declared that the constitutional definition of Malay in Malaysia is flawed. The Constitution of Malaysia, specifically Article 160, defines a Malay as a Muslim, speaks the Malay language and practices the Malay custom. From there on, he derived a conclusion with the intention of proving the absurdity of Article 160. Based on the Article, by right, he said, there was no Malay prior to the coming of Islam to the Malay Peninsula in the 13th and the 14th century.

The reductio ad absurdum by Farish Noor provides a more direct path to the answer than what I had managed previously.

Categories
Politics & government

[1596] Of speech on race by Obama

In case you missed it:

Categories
Politics & government Society

[1346] Of sad pragmatism for communal lines-cutting criticisms

An honest criticism is the first step towards identifying and subsequently, rectifying mistakes. In a society sensitive to ethnic issues such as in Malaysia, such honest criticism may be hard to make when it crosses ethnic lines. By crossing, I mean to say the critic and the criticized belong to different communities. Too often, innocent criticisms that cut communal boundaries are taken as acts close to racism if not racism itself, with the concept of non-interference is applied thoroughly.

That is an unfortunate tendency which may show that how far a person is from a racialist worldview. I suspect the misperception of an honest criticism as something racial in nature is closely related to a person’s inability to take criticism as well as personal bias.

When criticized, instead accepting the criticism attributing as directed towards his own mistake, he seeks to attribute such criticism to something unrelated to the mistake, thus putting the criticism in a way that it might be unjustified. In doing so, he changes the subject from honest criticism to something else. For a criticism that cuts communal barriers, if the criticized person views his world through communal lens, race or other communal-identifying factors become the obvious candidate for the purpose of diversion.

Sometimes, honest misunderstanding may occur but even then, there must be a basis for such misunderstanding. I am inclined to believe that certain misunderstanding is based on a person’s consciousness of communal-identifying factors, possibly placing too much emphasize on race, etc rather than the criticism on the mistake itself. In this case, when such criticism is made, the first thing that comes to his mind is skin color, etc — which is irrelevant to honest criticism — instead of the beef of the criticism itself.

In many cases, the concept of non-interference is held with utmost jealousy by communities. Any criticism coming from outside a community would be deemed as interference and only criticism coming from inside the community could be taken as sometimes legitimate. I could offer a few instances as examples to illustrate my point. Religious conservative Muslims in Malaysia do have problems having non-Muslims to criticize the status of religious freedom within Muslim Malaysian community. Another is the example was when EU ambassador to Malaysia, Thierry Rommel criticized Malaysian discriminatory economic policies. Malaysian political leaders in turn told the EU to stop meddling in Malaysian affairs.

These two possible causes do not make an exhaustive list but they are particularly important to recognize in politics. For a society that places too much political correctness rather than truth, along with one’s the ability to divert attention as mentioned earlier, any poor critic would find himself being unfairly accused of being a racist by too many people whom are particularly adept at coming up with conclusions only after piercing any issue only skin deep. In the end, if the critic does not have the stomach to fight on active or passive misconception, the mistake which the critic had pointed out would be drowned, forgotten and left uncorrected.

For this reason, in a society as diverse as Malaysia, it is perhaps desirable for any legitimate criticism to be kept inside a community, where the critics and the criticized belong to the same community. Through this, at least, communal issues could not be used to divert attention. More importantly, pragmatically speaking, is that any for legitimate politically-related criticism is to be made, it is good to have partners with different background. When there is communal difference between the would-be critic and the would-be criticized, the critic would be better off to find a partner to eliminate the communal difference and have the partner to criticize would-be criticized.

This is a sad conclusion that appeals to pragmatism, if the assumptions are true. It is sad because the art of criticism itself becomes the victim of racism, trying to avoid the diversion the non-interference policy grants. It is sad for the highest moral demands honest criticisms against all wrongs, regardless whether if it cuts communal lines.

Categories
Politics & government Society

[1341] Of BN’s false assumption of monolithic communities

I have lately begun to wonder how UMNO manages communal relationship within the Malaysian society at large. While the answer to the question may be obvious through casual observation, there is an intriguing piece of which I have yet to grasp; it is in the air and it eludes me. I have struggled for several days to describe that piece and the best arrangement of words I could muster is this: UMNO perceives various ethnic communities as monolithic group and it refuses or unable to accept the fact such communities are diverse and do not have one mind.

This idea sources its rationale from UMNO’s preference to discuss matters on ethnic relationship behind closed door between its own four walls with its political partners in Barisan Nasional. They would deliberate on the matter by themselves and then impose the outcome of the deliberation on the general public. From time to time, UMNO seems to force its partner to come to a conclusion favorable to UMNO at the expense of its partners. Once that is done, opinion originating from outside of BN would be dismissed as fringes and irrelevant for BN recognizes only themselves as exclusive representatives of all ethnic communities and these representatives have agreed to a conclusion or solution. Thus, UMNO and BN claim that its politics is inclusive. This is done to create the appearance that BN has the monopoly of support from all communities. In the process, the assumption of ethnic groups are monolithic in its point of view; the lack of political pluralism.

What they recognize however does not mean it is necessarily true. My disgust for such UMNO’s pretension of exclusive representation of the Malays prompted me to state that unelected representatives have no mandate to represent everybody.

Those in BN do represent some groups in the society but they certainly do not totally represent a whole community. For instance UMNO does not represent each and every Malay, just as how MCA does not represent each and every Chinese.

Despite that, perception is important. In a society of a majority with limited education level, the effect of groupthink could be substantial. Such members of the society have limited ability to think for themselves and are more than happy to let others do the thinking for them. For UMNO and BN themselves are happy to persuade that section of the society towards a communal cause via simplistic grand narrative.

While such tactics had worked in the past through tight control exerted over the mainstream media, disruptive technology has broken BN’s monopoly of information and hence, perception of monolithic society to BN and more important, to the general public. Greater proliferation of the internet along with the affordability of visual and audio recorders that disseminate information unvarnished from the bottom up, organically, instead of top down, inorganically is seriously challenging and dismantling that perception.

I wonder though whether this perception of exclusive representation is done unconsciously or on purpose by UMNO and BN.

Regardless, if UMNO and BN do not switch track, they would lose it aura of invincibility fast. The reason is ethnic communities are not monolithic entities that an official speaker could fully represent each community. There are many subgroups within each community and each has a mind of its own. The rich diversity in opinion in each community makes it impossible for the whole community to be represented by a speaker. This is especially so when UMNO tells such speakers what outcome is favorable before discussions even begin. If UMNO continues with its status quo, the representatives that BN recognizes as the exclusively representatives of a community would lose their relevance to the grassroots. Such representatives would have to represent UMNO’s wishes instead of the individuals in the communities. In the end, many subgroups in the community would be clearly not represented by BN representatives.

Similar scenario is observable in southern Thailand. The authority has tried to speak to the perceived leader of the rebellion in search for solution to the current conflict. While contacts have been made, rebel activities have yet to stop. This might due to the fact that these rebels work independently and unrepresented by any leaders the Thai authority is talking to. Like the ethnic communities in Malaysia, these rebels do not form a monolith organization which a leader or a limited circle could shape the direction of the rebellion.

In other words, the mind of the community is distributed far and wide. There is no hive with a queen that one could talk to. Furthermore, the queens recognized by UMNO and BN are not recognized by all members of the community.

In the past, BN had dealt with such plurality by overpowering it with the assumption of monolithic groups through suppression. New technology today has made such suppression less effective however. New physical and social technologies have allowed the idea of political pluralism to rule over the assumption of monolithic society.

UMNO and BN are struggling to deal with this. Judging by both’s incoherent assaults against blogs lately, it is possible that they are shaken by this new challenge of political pluralism amid the presumption of monolithic communities, among other things.

Categories
Politics & government Society

[1323] Of unelected representatives have no mandate to represent everybody

There is strength in numbers… with all things equal, of course. Those active in politics realize this and they work hard to build up their bases. Some however pretend that they have similar support, claiming to represent a body while no member of the body could recall appointing any representative to speak for the members as one. Though this might seem odd to those with the right of mind, self-proclaimed but unelected representatives are as common as rats in the monsoon drain.

It is not hard to find an example or two.

One that comes to mind is the component parties of the Barisan Nasional. It is customary for those in UMNO to claim to speak for all Malays, claiming to represent all Malays. The same is true to MCA and MIC. This however is untrue because not all Malays agree to be represented by UMNO, or any other community for that matter. When presented with proof that these race-based parties do not represent every Malay, Chinese, Indian, etc as they claim to be, their way out is to accuse those that refused to be represented by them as traitors.

What these unelected representatives really mean by traitors really not traitors to the community but rather, traitors to the unelected leaders, which none has pledged loyalty to in the first place.

Another similar example relates to the religious conservative Muslims who claimed to speak for the whole Muslim community, as if the Muslim community is a monolith society with a single mind. When those that disagree raised their voice against these unelected representatives, the self-proclaimed leaders began calling those that have different minds as heretics. But the religious conservatives are strange animals. While they may play with exclusive politics game, when one genuine wishes to opt out of the community, these religious conservatives actively hinder one’s liberty to do so. A true catch-22 — they will shove you out of the door but they do not let you go out of the door. The minds of the religious conservatives are truly mindless.

In both cases, the trend is observable, as clear as daylight. The unelected representatives masquerade as the authorities of a community despite knowing full well that they have no organic mandate to speak for everybody in the community. When dissenting voice fills the air to remind the pretenders of that fact, these unelected representatives would accuse the reminders as traitors to the community. The accusation continues on and on until only those that agree with the unelected leaders, as well as those that are too afraid of being labeled as traitors, are the only ones left in the community.

Suddenly, only those that stay loyal to the unelected representative are the true members of the community. The others which were part of the original and more inclusive community are now the outsiders.

The unelected representatives have no mandate to represent us; they have no mandate to represent a community which has never appointed them as the speakers. These unelected representatives are merely pretenders, impostors, liars. Or at the very least, these unelected representatives assume that they have the support of the community; they simply assume too much.