The ACA seems to be active nowadays after being dormant for years. I wonder why?
The Malaysian Nature Society together with its partners will celebrate the 20th anniversary of the establishment of Kuala Selangor Nature Park this Saturday and Sunday; October 27 and 28 respectively.
The MNS has managed the Park on behalf of the Selangor state government since the Park was first established in 1987. I am not quite sure what was the direct impetus for the creation of the Park but initial reading suggests an opposition to turn the area into a golf course. The Park — partly an area of secondary forest and partly mangrove swamp — is a breeding ground for several endangered species.
I myself have yet to visit the place and I thought by volunteering with the program through MNS, this could be a great opportunity to explore the place and have fun with my camera. It is a great opportunity for you to learn more about Kuala Selangor and conservation at large!
The MNS has prepared a flyer for the public and you may read the document electronically here. Listing of programs and direction to the Park is available in the document. Come and visit us!
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[1420] Of I am a Malay but which Malay?
The wall was white and blank but yet there I was, taking interest in the uninspiring wall. A public discussion was going on inside a small hall. I came because the names of the panel were sufficiently widely known across the urban society but as I found out later and too late, the discussion failed to fill my body with a soul; the discussion was filled with repetitive mosaic of clichés. So, there I was, inattentive, until a friend got up and announced to the audience, explaining, that we were all Malays, once. That took my eyes off the wall, my ears off the low hum of air conditioner, my mind off a pie in the sky.
I have heard many points about race and religion but this was the first time I heard a person saying that we all were Malays. As he went so eloquently, the idea of Malays was far greater than the notion ethnicity as most of us comprehend today. He asserted, if I correctly interpreted his point, that all groups living in Southeast Asia or more accurately the Nusantara were Malays.
Right or wrong, it was a curious notion, and provocative. Indeed, the crowd which was relatively chatty throughout the discussion, fell into silence, perhaps dumbstruck. The fact that the number of Malays amid the audience was limited to few people probably contributed to that silence. After a few seconds of information processing, I said to myself, ”Oooo”¦”
I have given up on the effort to define Malay due to various competing definitions. Though I do prefer certain definition , I do not dwell too much on the matter. Still, the varying definitions do provide one with the amusement one requires when one has little tasks to fill one’s time.
The Malaysian constitution defines a Malay as a Muslim, among other things. This allows Arabs, Chinese, Indians and others originated from outside of the Nusantara who are Muslims to be considered as Malays; Malays whom do not embrace Islam are somehow not Malays. This is as absurd as a pink invisible unicorn.
The regionalist Malays describe Malays as the indigenous populace of the Nusantara; the Malaya Irredenta. The formation of the now defunct Maphilindo was formed to appeal to this regionalist Malay concept, among other things. I myself prefer this definition; it is inclusive enough to bring most people of Southeast Asia organically together but yet, it is exclusive enough for “us” to be unique. I however have met Filipinos and Indonesians who frown when they are described as Malays. Old rivalries and wars between the Malays and the Javanese strengthen the difference. Yet, those wars were called Pamalayu, perang antara Melayu, a Malay civil war.
The cosmopolitan Malays prefer a more inclusive idea: everybody who resides in the Nusantara is a Malay. This, perhaps, was what the friend of mine was referring to.
Another concept of Malay refers to the citizenship of Malaya, just as the citizens of Germany are Germans, the citizens of Italy are Italians, for France French, for China Chinese; a naturalized Nepali could be a German. This was once put forward by Putera-AMCJA in the People’s Constitution of 1947 which was rejected in favor of another constitution that we Malaysians now live under. Well, after all that amendments, sort of.
These definitions are not necessarily mutually exclusive and it is likely not exhaustive either. That however does not prevent me from asking, which Malay appeals to your bias?

p/s — this entry was first published at Bolehland.
I was surprised to find out that the people of the Philippines once contemplated to name their state as Malaysia.
Filipino politicians who dreamt of creating a Pan-Malay nation also considered adopting the name Malaysia, which had referred to the overall Malay archipelago before becoming the name of the newly independent Malaysian nation in 1963.5 The former Filipino Vice-President of the Pan-Malayan Union presented a bill in the Senate in 1962 to change the name of the Philippines to Malaysia (Alonto 2003 p.190). While the bill was debated in the Congress, the name was adopted by Tunku Abdul Rahman, who led the Malaysian nationalist movement, and the term narrowed to refer to the country-in-waiting, consisting of the Malay Peninsula and territories of the former British colonies in Borneo. [Reviving Malay Connections in Southeast Asia. Minako Sakai]
Suddenly, the etymology of the name Malaysia sounds like a worthy subject to research into.