Teaching Literature in English Yahoo Group

January 3rd, 2009

After much thought, I have set up a new Yahoo group on teaching literature in English. It will provide a platform for discussing various issues related to teaching literature in English. 

The group is open to all who are interested in participating in the discussions. However, it is a moderated group and permission is required to be registered as a member.

The discussions will cover a whole range of topics on teaching literature in English, with reference to Malaysian schools - primary, secondary and  also tertiary education. I do hope to give some attention to the SPM Literature in English Elective paper and also to the STPM Literature in English Paper.

The following is the web address: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/teachlitmalaysia

Look forward to your participation!!

2009 - Happy New Year?

January 1st, 2009

There is so much fear and anxiety on what the year has in store for us. We are asked to be prudent and cautious in all that we do - how we spend our money, should we consider career moves  or consider any kind of activity which has an element of risk in it.

How we will survive the next 12 months, time will tell. But surely it can’t be all bad. There must be a ray of hope somewhere?  This we may have to create for ourselves. I believe we will have to make sense of all that is happening in our own ways and come to terms with it at a personal level.

Guess there won’t be too many words of wisdom to guide us as each one of us tries to understand what is happening and makes the best of things.

No resolutions for the new year for me. Just best wishes to all!!

Have a good year!!

Merry Christmas 2008

December 24th, 2008

It’s that time of the year again and I was wondering what would be my Christmas wish for myself and for those who are dear and maybe not so dear to me!

We all too often hear that Christmas is a time for giving but are rather happy just to receive. So I was really touched when my dear friend Hyacinth Gaudart told me that on Christmas Eve she was going all the way to Melaka to bring some gifts and food to children who have been placed in a covent there. These children are refugees from Timur-Leste. I was even more glad when she accepted my offer to contribute something for their gifts.

Giving money is an easy thing. Yes, the money was earned and now being given as an act of charity. But I can’t help but wonder how much more meaningful it is when it means giving our energy and time too. And this should never be seen as a sacrifice on our part as we often receive more than we actually give when we participate in a charitable act.

So my Christmas wish for myself this year is that  I would do a little more for others than I have done this year.

And for all Christians, I wish you a blessed Christmas. Hope you find your own speacial meaning during this festive season. To all other friends, students, colleagues and dear readers  of this blog, have a happy holiday and despite our different religious beliefs, I hope we find it in our hearts to be gracious and tolerant to one and all!

Season’s Greetings? Some better not sent.

December 18th, 2008

It is that time of the year again. People are busy sending greetings to all and sundry.

I am developing a dislike to receiving certain greetings.  First, is the greeting card from acquaintances, colleagues and business contacts. It is a card that has a signature and a rubber stamp. It is not addressed to me or anyone. It is  a card that an employee has put into an envelope and pasted a neat label with my address on it. I don’t think these senders even know I will receive cards from them.

Then there are these mass email greetings. One greeting card or message for all of one’s friends, etc.  Some senders don’t even bother to put the email addresses as BCC and we get to see how many of us received the same message!!! When I receive such an email I just see who it is from and without opening it, I delete it.

Are we really too busy to take time to send individual messages or cards to friends? Has it become such that we can categorise all one friends into a single lot and send all of them the same message? As for me, I think not.

I remember before the pre-email and Internet era, I would buy greeting cards for some friends. I would actually bother reading what was written inside and choose different cards for different friends. Later. I preferred blank cards so I could write my own message.

Today, I send out email greetings but I individualise my message. I would have some news which is common but my greetings and signing off will be quite different to each recipient. However, I must admit that I don’t send many email greetings.

What I am guilty of is sending the brief and standard sms greetings to my friends on the day of the festival. There are some who receive a variation of it like family and loved ones though.

This year, as many before it, I have not bought cards for anyone. I will send out email messages that are personalised. The sms?? I guess they will continue but at least the recipients won’t get to see who else got it too.

If you have read this far, merry christmas and a happy new year!

Cheers

Edwin

Writing About Little Indias in KL … revisiting my roots in Brickfields

December 8th, 2008

I have been working on an article over the last ten days and it has been quite an experience - very different from the academic papers I am used to writing.

I was writing about Brickfields and Jalan Masjid India/Leboh Ampang in Kuala Lumpur. It was my reading of these 2 places and how they remain part of the urban KL landscape. Of course, not just my reading as I was referring to various sources and people associated to these 2 places. 

The former is my birthplace and writing about it brought back quite a lot of memories and emotions. I was quite happy to keep them out of the article. Keeping my personal presence out of the article was not too difficult as I never wanted it to be a personal journey.

Brickfields Road and later Jalan Brickfields and now Jalan Tun Sambanthan will always be Brickfields to me. I’ve been there so many times over the years. Stopped at various places I had played, studied and grown up. Most of these places now no longer exist. The church I used to attend is still there. All else have been obliterated by one form of development or another. Is this a sign???

Then, telling someone you were from Brickfields sometimes had a plus point (depends how you look at it, I guess). It had some notorious gangs. They were mostly invisible to those who lived there. Other people wondered how we could live there. We did quite happily,  not harassed by the gangs. They gave us a protection of sorts and others would think twice before they did harm to a Brickfields boy.

The place where my home once stood is completely gone. Yet, in my mindscape it still remains. I can see the lane from the small road that led to my house - 6A, Jalan Kandang Kerbau (I used to dread telling friends my address, as child).  It was a wooden house with attap roof. It housed 11 of us, 8 children, my parents and my grandmother. I wonder how we fit into that small space. Still, we all had our own space. There was never a sense of over-crowding. That’s what a home is, I guess. My fondest memories of my childhood and family are probably there. In that house, there was no death, no serious illness or unresolved conflict.

I wonder if we live and love best when we have the least. Of course, there is the trap that I’m  romantising my past and making it seem idyllic. Sure, there were difficult times but we overcame them. There were loads of things we desired then and got them much later in life. But they did not get in the way of my childhood happiness.

As a child and a teenager, I lived in Brickfields; from birth till I was 15 years old. Everything was almost a walking distance away - school, aunt’s home where I had 9 cousins, homes of childhood friends, the church and all that I needed. 

I still remember going to the barber shop with my father and later my brothers. I reacll my father or was it my eldest taking me the tailor to sew my short pants for Christmas. And years later my first long pants were sewn at International Tailors, located in a row of shophouses, quite close to the YMCA.

I actually walked from my home to MBS KL - it was almost a daily routine - walking to school in the morning and taking a bus back home. Stopping at the ice kacang stall near Lido cinema (it too is gone). And loads of other things come rushing into my memory.

I wonder what happened to all my childhood friends, not that I miss them as we out grew each other as we moved away from our kampung in Brickfields.  It is a thought, a yearning an absence which slips into you when you return to your place of birth.

I wonder if a Brickfields reunion of sorts might be a way of finding out. Years ago, I went to my one only Form 5 class reunions and dreaded it. It was a disaster. We had grown up and just did not connect. What a sad lot we were, we had nothing to say to each other!! Maybe it is best to leave Brickfields in the past too.

And what about Jalan Masjid India? That would be another story. A less personal one, am sure.

I need a coffee now. My grandmother made the best coffee ever. I often see it placed on the dining table waiting for me to come and pick it up. And that too was in the past and for me that past somehow remains in the present.

Choosing plays for my EDU3217 Teaching the Language of Drama course

November 17th, 2008

I am again thinking of what texts to teach my undergrads for the survey drama course I teach at UPM. Over the years I have started with either Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex or Antigone and then gone on to do a Shakespearean text - either King Lear or Antony and Cleopatra. Then I would teach a play  by Shaw - Pygmalion and an American text, Tennessee William’s A Streetcar Named Desire. And then choose one final play, usually a recently published play. Over the years I have used Mahesh Dattani’s Thirty Days in September and Wong Phui Nam’s Anike. 

I like teaching living writers as students can actually meet them or contact them. Wong Phui Nam has spoken to my students and through a blog, my students actually chatted with Indian playwright Mahesh Dattani.

In fact, one of the most exciting things we did when reading Dattani’s play was to create a blog where students connected with each other and the playwright.  Do see this link:

http://dattani30daysinseptember.blogspot.com

You can also read Dattani’s blog to the students through this link: 

http://dattani30daysinseptember.blogspot.com/2004_07_01_archive.html

They also were quite fortunate to watch the play being performed by an Indian troupe at the Actor’s Studio. In fact, we booked the whole theatre for UPM students. After the play, the students had an interview session with the cast and the Director. I believe this was a rather educational and entertaining experience for most students. I found the whole experience very rewarding as part of my teaching experience.

I have had various levels of success teaching the plays I have selected for my students and feedback from the students confirms this. The responses have been so varied from the different groups of students that I have never thought of dropping any of these plays permanently from my pool of teaching texts.

Over the years, sad to say, my students are not quite what I would like them to be. It is both their lack of exposure to the world of theatre and also the level of language proficiency. The lack of exposure is easier to deal with. Often one of the course requirement is going to watch a play and there are other activities to familiarise them to the world of theatre. The latter is more challenging. That’s where the choice of texts become crucial.

So before the second semester begins, I will make my choices. One text that I have decided to include is Kee Thuan Chye’s recently performed new play entitled The Swordfish, Then the Concubine . I also hope to get him to meet my students.

If anyone reading this blog posting happens to be my student or were my student,  I welcome your response. Others are welcome to respond too.

Cheers

Edwin

Malaya(sia)’s Declaration of Independence

November 8th, 2008

This posting is possible because one of my students found the declaration and sent it to me. Thanks, Elisha Nurusus.

IN the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful. Praise be to God, the Lord of the Universe and may the blessings and peace of God be upon His Messengers.

WHEREAS the time has now arrived when the people of the Persekutuan Tanah Melayu will assume the status of a free independent and sovereign nation among nations of the World


AND WHEREAS by an agreement styled the Federation of Malaya Agreement, 1957, between Her Majesty the Queen and Their Highnesses the Rulers of the Malay States it was agreed that the Malay States of Johore, Pahang, Negri Sembilan, Selangor, Kedah, Perlis, Kelantan, Trengganu and Perak and the former Settlements of Malacca and Penang should as from the 31st day of August, 1957, be formed into a new Federation of States by the name of Persekutuan Tanah Melayu


AND WHEREAS it was further agreed between the parties to the said agreement that the Settlements of Malacca and Penang aforesaid should as from the said date cease to form part of Her Majesty’s dominions and that Her Majesty should cease to exercise any sovereignty over them


AND WHEREAS it was further agreed by the parties aforesaid that the Federation of Malaya Agreement, 1948, and all other agreements subsisting between Her Majesty the Queen and Their Highnesses the Rulers or any one of them immediately before the said date should be revoked as from the date and that all powers and jurisdiction of Her Majesty or of the Parliament of the United Kingdom in or in respect of the Settlements aforesaid or the Malay States or the Federation as a whole should come to an end


AND WHEREAS effect has been given to the Federation of Malaya Agreement, 1957, by Her Majesty the Queen, Their Highnesses the Rulers, the Parliament of the United Kingdom and the Legislatures of the Federation and of the Malay States


AND WHEREAS a constitution for the Government of the Persekutuan Tanah Melayu has been established as the supreme law thereof.


AND WHEREAS by the Federal Constitution aforesaid provision is made to safeguard the rights and prerogatives of Their Highnesses the Rulers and the fundamental rights and liberties of the people and to provide for the peaceful and orderly advancement of the Persekutuan Tanah Melayu as a constitutional monarchy based on Parliamentary democracy


AND WHEREAS the Federal Constitution aforesaid having been approved by an Ordinance of the Federal Legislatures, by the Enactments of the Malay States and by resolutions of the Legislatures of Malacca and Penang has come into force on the 31st day of August 1957, aforesaid


NOW In the name of God the Compassionate, the Merciful, I TUNKU ABDUL RAHMAN PUTRA ibni AL-MARHUM SULTAN ABDUL HAMID HALIMSHAH, PRIME MINISTER OF THE PERSEKUTUAN TANAH MELAYU, with the concurrence and approval of Their Highnesses the Rulers of the Malay States do hereby proclaim and declare on behalf of the people of the Persekutuan Tanah Melayu that as from the thirty first day of August, nineteen hundred and fifty seven, the Persekutuan Tanah Melayu comprising the States of Johore, Pahang, Negri Semblian, Selangor, Kedah, Perlis, Kelantan, Trengganu, Perak, Malacca and Penang is and with God’s blessing shall be for ever a sovereign democratic and independent State founded upon the principles of liberty and justice and ever seeking the welfare and happiness of its people and the maintenance of a just peace among all nations.


Prime Minister

Kuala Lumpur, 31st Day of August 1957

YouTube and reading speeches with my students

October 31st, 2008

YouTube finally made it into my classroom – some might say a little late but that’s okay.

For a few years now, my students and I read Martin Luther King Jr’s – ‘I have a dream’ speech in one of my literature classes. Some time after the last semester I discovered that the speech was actually available on YouTube. So this semester, my students and I read the speech together and then watched the YouTube clipping.Reading my students’ blogs on the lesson made it is quite clear that they enjoyed the whole experience. I found it a great teaching aid – getting my students to be part of that audience! I also mentioned to them that it would be great that if we could hear our founding father’s full speech on Independence Day. All we get to hear is Tunku Abdul Rahman’s shouts of MERDEKA!- even in YouTube. We hardly hear what the Tunku says as there is a voiceover even in that short video clip. I have been trying to get the full Merdeka text and still have not succeeded. If anyone of you out there has it – please let me know how I can get hold of it. I’m not sure if one would find it at his memorial.I did mention to my students that at least we can get to read our former Prime Minister, Tun Dr. Mahathir Muhammad’s vision for Malaysia in his speech ‘Vision 2020: The Way Forward”. Click on this link for the full text: http://www.wawasan2020.com/vision/ YouTube actually has a very brief clip of his speech.Today, while reading Malaysiakini, I came across this important speech of the former Law Minister and I decided to paste the full text in this blog. Not sure if it will make its way to YouTube … one never knows. Do take time to read the full text – it is worthwhile your time. Speech by Zaid Ibrahim (former Law Minister): Malaysia - a lost democracy? Oct 31, 2008
Let me start by inviting you back into history. Imagine that it is the morning of the Aug 31, 1957. At midnight, an independent nation calling itself the Federation of Malaya is to be unveiled. Conceived as a cutting edge model of multiracial and multi-religious coexistence and cooperation, it is poised to stand out as an example of what can be achieved through diplomacy and a respect for the spirit of democracy.
It is of great historical significance
It is of great historical significance that the transition from colony to independent nation, so often achieved only at the great price that turmoil and unrest exacts, has been achieved peacefully. Though this is a process that may have been made more difficult without the skill and fortitude with which negotiations to that end have been carried out, they do not define it.
That honour goes to the aspirations of all those who call Malaya home. The quest for self-determination has not been one that recognised race. It has been, simply put, a Malayan one.

I would like to think that as midnight approached, one of the elements that gave confidence to the Alliance leaders and, in fact, all Malayans was the knowledge that a constitutional arrangement that accorded full respect and dignity for each and every Malayan, entrenched the rule of law and established a democratic framework for government had been put in place. The federal constitution was a masterful document. Inspired by history and shaped lovingly to local circumstance, it was handcrafted by a team of brilliant jurists who appreciated that they could not discharge their burden without first having understood the hearts of minds of those who would call this nation their home and whose children would call it their motherland. Hundreds of hours of meetings with representatives of all quarters resulted in a unique written constitution that cemented a compact between nine sultanates and former crown territories.
This compact honoured their Highnesses the Malay Rulers, Islam and the special status of the Malays even as it seamlessly allowed for constitutional government and created an environment for the harmonious and equal coexistence of all communities through the guarantee of freedoms and the establishment of the institutions that would allow for the protection and promotion of these guarantees. If at all there was a social contract, it was the guarantee of equality and the promise of the rule of law.I would say that as at Aug 31, 1957, the Federation of Malaya was set to become a shining example of a working democracy. Though special provisions had been included in the constitution to allow for protective affirmative action measures where the Malays were concerned, and later the natives of Sabah and Sarawak when these states merged into the renamed Federation of Malaysia, and for declarations of Emergency and the enacting of exceptional laws against subversion, these provisions were not anti-democratic nor were they undermining of the rule of law. Conversely, if used as contemplated by the founders of the constitution, they were aimed at protecting democracy from grave uncertainties that could undermine the very foundations of the nation.
If I sound nostalgic, it is because in some ways it could very sadly be said that democracy and the rule of law, as they were understood at the time this nation achieved its independence, at a time when I was much younger, have been consigned to the past. Events that followed in history undermined and stifled their growth. To understand how this came about and the state of things as they are, one however must have an understanding of the politics of the country. I seek your indulgence as I attempt a brief summary of key historical events.

After the euphoria of 1957, race-relations took a turn for the worst in 1969. The race riots of that year have marked us since. As a response, adjustments were made and measures introduced to keep what was now perceived to be a fragile balance in place. The Rukun Negara was pushed through as a basis of national unity and the New Economic Policy (NEP) was unveiled by which the government was mandated to address the disparity in wealth between the Malays and the other communities, in particular the Chinese, that had been identified as the root cause of the resentment that had exploded into violence. These measures, in my view, were on the whole positive. They were agreed to by all the political parties making up the government, in part due to an understanding that the NEP was a temporary measure aimed at assisting the Malays that would not disadvantage the other communities. The late Tun Dr. Ismail talked about giving the Malays an opportunity to survive in the modern competitive world. It was readily appreciated that unless society as a whole addressed and rectified certain historical imbalances and inequities, the country would flounder. In my view, these measures were easily reconciled with democracy and the rule of law.

The 1980s presented a different scenario altogether. We saw a unilateral restructuring of the so-called social contract by a certain segment of the BN leadership that allowed for developments that have resulted in our current state of affairs. The non-Malay BN component parties were perceived by Umno to be weak and in no position to exert influence. Bandied about by Umno ideologues, the social contract took on a different, more racialist tone. The essence of its reconstructed meaning was this: that Malaya is primarily the home of the Malays, and that the non-Malays should acknowledge that primacy by showing deference to the Malays and Malay issues. Also, Malay interest and consent must be allowed to set the terms for the definition and exercise of non-Malay citizenship and political rights. This marked the advent of Ketuanan Melayu or, in English, Malay Supremacy.
Affirmative action and special status became a matter of privilege by reference to race rather than of need and questioning of this new status quo was not to be tolerated. As Ketuanan Melayu evolved and entrenched itself, Islam became political capital due to the close links between Malays and the religion. The constitution itself defines a ‘Malay’, for purposes of affirmative action, as someone who amongst other things professes the religion of Islam. This over the years led to a politically driven articulation of Malaysia as an Islamic state. Again, no questions were tolerated. Majoritarianism had become the governing paradigm of governance as the character and nature of rights were defined by Malay interests and defined by them.This new political philosophy in which the primacy of Malay interests was for all purposes and intents the raison d’etre of government naturally led to interference with key institutions. I say naturally as it was, and still is, impossible to reconcile the principles of equality and civil rights of the people of this country with the primacy of one group over all others. Needless to say, a new social order in which some are made to defer to the primacy of others is not going to be easily accepted. As such, in order to enforce compliance and to encourage acceptance harsh measures would have to be taken to quash protest or disagreement. Policy doctrine or diktat not supported by consensus will almost certainly be a subject of contention. It is for this reason that in the 1980s already harsh anti-democratic laws that allowed for the suppression of legitimate dissent such as the Internal Security Act, the Official Secrets Act, the Police Act, the Printing Presses and Publications Act and the Sedition Act were tightened further. Where possible, reliance on them was made immune from judicial scrutiny a feat achieved only through a constitutional amendment that suborned the judiciary to parliament. It got to a stage where when more than five friends got together, one wondered whether it was wiser to obtain a police permit. Such was the state of the law, such was the state of democracy.Mukhriz Mahathir will probably be the new Umno Youth leader. In saying as he did recently that there is no need for law and judicial reforms as it will not benefit the Malays, he typifies what is perceived as the kind of Umno leader who appeals to the right-wing of Malay polity. That he may be right is sad as it leads to the ossification of values that will only work against the interests of the party and the nation. This type of thinking may pave the way to a suggestion in the future that we may as well do away with general elections altogether as they may not be good for the Malays for if the justice that a revitalised rule of law would allow for is not to the benefit of the Malays, what is? More inefficiency, more corruption and a more authoritarian style of government perhaps. We are a deeply divided nation, adrift for our having abandoned democratic traditions and the rule of law in favour of a political ideology that serves no one save those who rule.How else can we describe the state of affairs in Malaysia? In a country where the rule of law is respected and permitted to flourish, just laws are applied even-handedly and fairly. I can point to numerous instances where that has not been our experience. Let me point a few out to you. A gathering of one group constitutes an illegal assembly but not that of another. A speech or publication is seditious or constitutes a serious threat to the security of the nation such as to warrant detention without trial under the ISA if published by one person but not another. This cannot be right even if it were to be to the benefit of the majority, which is not the case.
My belief in constitutional democracy and the rule of law is founded on an acceptance of their functional qualities and the prospect of sustainable and inclusive development that they offer. It is of no concern to me whether Fukuyama was right when he declared that in view of the success of liberal democracies all over the world and the collapse of communism, mankind had achieved the pinnacle of success and history was dead.
There are less esoteric reasons but as, if not more, compelling ones. Indonesia’s transition to democracy since the end of military rule in 1998 showcases these. The majority of Indonesians have embraced democracy, religious tolerance, and religious pluralism. In addition, a vibrant civil society has initiated public discussions on the nature of democracy, the separation of religion and state, women’s rights, and human rights more generally. These developments have contributed to a gradual improvement in conditions for human rights, including religious freedom, over the past few years. Since 2003, Indonesia has also overtaken Malaysia on the Reporters sans Frontieres Press Freedom Index, moving up from 110th place to 100th out of 169 countries covered. Malaysia on the other hand has dropped from 104th place to 124th place in the same period. I am not surprised. In 1999, Indonesia passed a new press law that, in repealing 2 previous Suharto administration laws, guaranteed free press through the introduction of crucial measures. This new law allows journalists to freely join associations, guarantees the right of journalists to protect their sources, eliminates prior censorship of print or broadcast news and makes the subverting of the independence of the press a criminal offence. It also establishes an independent body to mediate between the press, the public and government institutions, uphold a code of ethics and adjudicates disputes. Progress has not stopped there. On April 3, this year, Indonesia passed its Freedom of Information Act. This latest law allows Indonesia’s bureaucracy to be open to public scrutiny and compels government bodies to disclose information. To enforce disclosures and to adjudicate disputes, a new body has been created under the new law, independent of government and the judiciary. While there remains some debate about the penal sanctions for misuse of the law, the passing of the act clearly is a step in the right direction.The lessons of the African and the Caribbean states are there for all to see. Do we emulate Zimbabwe or do we take Botswana as our political and economic model? How is it that Haiti is far behind the Dominican Republic in economic terms when they both achieved their independence at about the same time, and have the same resources? Singapore’s success is mainly attributed to its commitment to good governance and rule of law, even though political dissent is not tolerated. Democracy, a system of government based on fair and transparent rules and laws, and the respect people have for institutions of government – these make the difference. Economic prosperity drives democracy but stifle true democracy and the inevitable outcome is economic ruin. It is useful to remember that freedom is vital for economic development.The critical feature of a constitutional democracy to me is the test of constitutionality itself. Does the government allow its own legitimacy to be questioned? Does it permit executive decisions to be challenged? Written constitutions normally provide the standard by which the legitimacy of government action is judged. In the United States the practice of judicial review of congressional legislation ensures that the power of government to legislate is kept under check. Bipartisan debate and votes of conscience are not only encouraged but also expected of congressmen and representatives. More recently the basic law of Germany and Italy provided explicitly for judicial review of parliamentary legislation. We have the opposite situation here. The jurisdiction of the high court can be, and has been, ousted when it comes to challenges of executive decisions even if such decisions impact on fundamental liberties and other rights under the constitution. For instance, where government compulsorily acquires land for a public purpose, the courts are prevented from questioning the bona fides of the acquisition. Where a discretion is exercised by the minister of home affairs under the Internal Security Act, the court is barred from examining the exercise of the discretion except so far as to ensure that the procedural requirements have been followed. Such detention without trial would be considered repugnant in any system predicated on the rule of law.Nation building is not a simple process. It is not achieved through tinkering with political ideologies or injudicious use of the coercive powers of state. These do not promote the lasting peace and stability that we crave for. We have failed miserably in dealing with complex issues of society by resorting to a political culture of promoting fear and division amongst the people. The Ketuanan Melayu model has failed. It has resulted in waste of crucial resources, energy and time and has distracted from the real issues confronting the country. Tan Sri Muhyiddin (Yassin), the DPM-in-waiting it would seem, suggested that there is a need for a closed-door forum for leaders of the BN to develop a common stand; a renewed national consensus grounded on the social contract. This is positive step but it should include all political leaders and be premised on the social contract that was the foundation of independence. The results of March 8 (elections) clearly show that the BN no longer exclusively speaks for the rakyat. Promoting discourse and dialogue is essential, as we must learn to talk and to listen to one another again. The recent pronouncement by the Malay rulers underscores the urgency with which we need to look at rebuilding the politics of consensus. Communication and trust amongst the people must be reestablished. The founders envisaged a government for all Malaysians. Even Tun Dr Mahathir (Mohamad) spoke about it. One of the elements of Vision 2020 as envisaged by Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamed was the creation of a united Bangsa Malaysia. How can such a vision be achieved if the government is not willing to listen to the grievances of a substantial segment of Malaysians? Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad introduced the idea of Bangsa Malaysia in a speech entitled “The Way Forward”. This is one of nine central and strategic challenges of Vision 2020. Although he only mentioned Bangsa Malaysia once, its use had sparked enthusiastic debates. The creation of Bangsa Malaysia is the challenge of establishing a
united Malaysian nation with a sense of a common and shared destiny. This must be a nation at peace with itself, territorially and ethnically integrated, living in harmony and full and fair partnership, made up of one Bangsa Malaysia with political loyalty to the nation.
Different meanings have been given to that term Bangsa Malaysia. Many believe that it was intended to bolster the non-Malays through the envisioning of a united country where their cultural and religious uniqueness would not be threatened; Tun Dr Mahathir in fact explicitly mentioned this. On the other hand, some believe that Bangsa Malaysia was just a neat reference to a Malaysia united under Malay or, more appropriately, Umno hegemony. Whatever the case, I would like to believe that whilst the government of BN has done little other than pay lip-service to the concept, principally by issuing pandering slogans, since Dr Mahathir left, the country will nevertheless in the future move towards a more pluralistic society. The integration of different ethnic groups would occur naturally through the expansion of economic life and through the unintended effects of globalization so much so that ethnicity will be depoliticised. We nonetheless need to actively promote efforts at an institutional level if we want this notion of Bangsa Malaysia to materialise. The political parties making up government may not want to do so for their own short-term interests but as a whole, the people will call for it. This brings us again to the democracy and the rule of law. We will not succeed in promoting, a united country and allow for the evolution of Bangsa Malaysia if we do not subscribe to the rule of law. We need the openness, freedom and social justice that will be possible only with it in place. and democracy. How do we bring unity to the people if we are not prepared to respect their dignity?To achieve the aspirations of the New Economic Policy, bumiputras need to be given thinking tools to participate in the global economy. At present their attention is kept focused, almost on a daily basis, on race related issues even though there are serious issues such as the economy and the lack of trust in the institutions of government to deal with. The obsession with the Ketuanan Melayu dotrine has in fact destroyed something precious in us. It makes us lose our sense of balance and fairness. When a certain Chinese lady was appointed head of a state development cooperation, having served in that cooperation for 33 years, there were protests from Malay groups because she is Chinese. A new economic vision is necessary, one that is more forward looking in outlook and guided by positive values that would serve to enhance cooperation amongst the races. This will encourage change for the better; to develop new forms of behaviour and shifts of attitudes; to believe that only economic growth will serve social equity; to aspire to a higher standard of living for all regardless of race. We need to meaningfully acknowledge that wealth is based on insight, sophisticated human capital and attitude change. A new dynamics focused on cooperation and competition will spur innovation and creativity.Some might say that this is a fantasy. I disagree. How do we go about transforming the culture and values of the bumiputras so that their ability to create new economic wealth can be sustained? By changing our political and legal landscapes with freedom and democracy. Dr Mahathir was right to ask that Malays embrace modernity. He fell short of what we needed by focusing on the physical aspects of modernity. He was mistaken to think all that was needed to change the Malay mindset was science and technology. He should have also promoted the values of freedom, human rights and the respect of the law. If affirmative action is truly benchmarked on the equitable sharing of wealth that is sustainable, then we must confront the truth and change our political paradigm; 40 years of discrimination and subsidy have not brought us closer. There is a huge economic dimension to the rule of law and democracy that this government must learn to appreciate.Relations between Islam, the state, law and politics in Malaysia are complex. How do we manage legal pluralism in Malaysia? Can a cohesive united Bangsa Malaysia be built on a bifurcated foundation of Sharia and secular principles? Will non-Muslims have a say on the operation of Islamic law when it affects the general character and experience of the nation? This is a difficult challenge and the solution has to be found. Leading Muslim legal scholar Abdullah Ahmad an- Na’im is hopeful. He believes that the way forward is to make a distinction between state and politics. He believes that Islam can be the mediating instrument between state and politics through the principles and institutions of constitutionalism and the protection of equal human rights of all citizens. Whatever the formula, we can only devise a system that rejects absolutism and tyranny and allows for freedom and plurality if we are able to first agree that discourse and dialogue is vital. Democracy and respect for the rights and dignity of all Malaysians is the prerequisite to this approach.A compelling argument for a constitutional democracy in Malaysia is that only through such a system will we be able to preserve and protect the traditions and values of Islam and the position of the Malay rulers. For a peaceful transition to true democracy of this country, one of key issue that requires care is the position of Islam and its role in the political system of the country. In fact I regard this to be of paramount consideration. Although the expression Islamic state is heard from time to time, and whilst it is true that Abim (Malaysian Muslim Youth Movement), PAS and lately Umno had the concept a key part of their agenda, the areas of emphasis differ and are subject to the contemporary political climate.For reasons too lengthy to discuss now, I would say that the “synthesis of reformist Islam, democracy, social welfare justice and equity” would be sufficient to appease the majority of Muslims in so far as the role of Islam in public life is concerned. This state of affairs could be achieved peacefully and without tearing the constitution apart. The progressive elements in PAS, inspired by Dr Burhanuddin Helmi in 1956, are still alive. PAS leaders of today who have carried that torch also make reference to a more accommodating vision of Islam that puts a premium on substantive justice and the welfare of the people as major policy initiatives.Umno’s approach (or more accurately Dr Mahathir’s approach) to Islamic content in public policies was articulated in the early 1990s. This however achieved little in changing the political system. His “progressive Islam” was more nationalistic than PAS, and designed to usher new elements of modernity into Islam. Science and technology were touted as the means to defend Islam and the faith. The approach taken was short on the ideas of human rights and social justice, and the rule of law and designed more to convince the rakyat of Islam’s compatibility with elements of modernity like science and technology.Anwar Ibrahim, the present opposition leader, articulated a brand of reformist Islam that was more individual centered and liberal. Drawing its humanist thought from the great Muslim scholar, Muhammad Iqbal, Islam Madani gave emphasis on human rights and freedoms. Islam Hadhari came on to the scene just before the 2004 general elections as another form of progressive Islam, possibly inspired by the thinking of another noted scholar, Ibn Khaldun. Unfortunately, nothing much came out of this effort.Whichever model or line of thought that will find permanence in our political landscape, Islamic aspirations and ideals will certainly become an important component in the realm of public policy. To prevent conflicts and ensure that various beliefs are absorbed and accepted into the political system, it is imperative that no force or compulsion is used. This is where the merit of a government adopting democracy and rule of law becomes apparent. The discussions and deliberations of even sensitive and delicate issues will make the participants aware of the value of ideas and the value of peaceful dialogues. Managing disputes through a determined, rules-based process will allow for a peaceful resolution of problems. The tolerance shown by the protagonists in Indonesia over delicate religious issues bodes well for that country and serves as a useful illustration of what could be. Approached this way, Islam in the context of Malaysian politics will be prevented from being as divisive and as threatening as race politics.In this, the issue of conflicts of jurisdiction still requires resolution. Our civil courts are denuded of jurisdiction to deal with matters that fall within the jurisdiction of the sharia courts. No court has been given the jurisdiction and power to resolve issues that may arise in both the sharia courts and the civil courts. The present separation of jurisdictions presupposes that matters will fall nicely into one jurisdiction or the other. However, human affairs are never that neat. What happens to the children of a marriage where one party converts to Islam and the other party seeks recourse in the civil Court? Or when the sharia court pronounces that a deceased person was a Muslim despite his family contesting the conversion? Or where the receiver of a company is restrained from dealing with a property by a sharia court order arising out of a family dispute? Where do the aggrieved parties go? I had suggested the establishment of the constitutional court, but that plea has fallen on deaf ears.There is marked increase in the use of harsh draconian measures in dealing with political and social issues. Some people say that groups such as Hindraf (Hindu Rights Action Force)  advocate violence and therefore justifies the use of such measures. They may have overlooked the fact that violence begets violence. Was not the detention of Hindraf leaders under the Internal Security Act itself an act of aggression, especially to people who consider themselves marginalised and without recourse? It is time that the people running this country realise that we will not be able to resolve conflicts and differences peacefully if we ourselves do not value peaceful means in dealing with problems. The situation has been aggravated by the absence an even-handed approach in dealing with organisations like Hindraf.While I applaud the prime minister for calling upon the Indian community to reject extremism, should not a similar call be made on the Malay community and Utusan Malaysia? I call on the prime minister, both the outgoing and the incoming, to deal with such issues fairly. Start by releasing the Hindraf leaders detained under the ISA. The release would create a window for constructive dialogue on underlying causes of resentment. I also appeal for the release of (Malaysia Today webmaster) Raja Petra (Kamaruddin) from his ISA detention. He is a champion of free speech. His writings, no matter how offensive they may be to some, cannot by any stretch of the imagination be seen as a threat to the national security of this country.The Malays are now a clear majority in numbers. The fear of their being out numbered is baseless; they are not under seige. The institutions of government are such that the Malays are effectively represented, and the there is no way the interest of the Malays can be taken away other than through their own weakness and folly. The BN government must abandon its reworked concept of the social contract and embrace a fresh perspective borne out of discussions and agreements made in good faith with all the communities in this country. It is time for us all to practice a more transparent and egalitarian form of democracy and to recognize and respect the rights and dignity of all the citizens of this country.At the end of the day, we must ask ourselves what it is that will allow us to protect all Malaysians, including the Malays? Good governance is about good leadership; and good leadership is all about integrity. We must have leaders of integrity in whom people can place their trust. If there is no integrity in leadership, the form of government is immaterial – it will fail. Integrity in leadership is the starting point to creating a just and fair society. Integrity of leadership does not lie only with the prime minister or his cabinet. It needs to permeate through all the organs of government. A key organ of government, the one tasked to protect the rights of the common man against the excesses of government, is the court. The rule of law in a constitutional democracy demands that the judiciary be protective of the nation’s subjects be they, I would say especially, the poor, the marginalised and the minorities. The courts must act with courage to protect the constitutionally guaranteed rights of all citizens, even if to do so were to invoke the wrath of the government of the day. Even though not all judges will rise to be chief justice, in they own spheres they must show courage. For example, in PP vs Koh Wah Kuan (2007), a majority bench of the federal court chose to discard the doctrine of separation of powers as underlying the federal constitution apparently because the doctrine is not expressly provided for in the constitution. This conclusion is mystifying as surely the court recognizes that power corrupts absolutely and can thus be abused. If the courts are not about to intervene against such excesses who is? Checks and balance are what the separation of powers is about. Surely the apex court is not saying that the courts do not play a vital role in that regard?The reluctance of the court to intervene in matters involving the executive is worrying. In Kerajaan Malaysia & Ors v Nasharuddin Nasir, the federal court ruled that an ouster clause was constitutional and was effective in ousting the review jurisdiction of the Court if that was the clear intention of parliament. The apex court so readily embraced the supremacy of parliament even though the constitution declares itself supreme. There is nothing in the federal constitution that explicitly sets out the ability of parliament to limit the court’s review jurisdiction. The court could have just as easily held that as the constitution was the supreme law, in the absence of express provisions in the constitution the court’s review jurisdiction remained intact. Is it not possible that in vesting the judicial authority of the federation in the high courts the framers of the constitution intended the review powers of the courts to be preserved from encroachment by the executive and legislature? In India, the supreme court has held on tenaciously to a doctrine of ‘basic structure’ that has allowed it to ensure the integrity of the democratic process and the rule of law. Any attempt to denude the courts of the power to review by amendment of the constitution has been struck down.The rule of law has no meaning if judges, especially apex court judges, are not prepared to enter the fray in the struggle for the preservation of human rights and the fundamental liberties. Supreme court judges in other jurisdictions have done so time and time again. Though it is far less difficult to accommodate the will of the government, that must be resisted at all costs, particularly where justice so demands. Only then can we say that Malaysia is grounded on the rule of law. To all our judges I say discard your political leanings and philosophy. Stick to justice in accordance with the law. As Lord Denning reminded us: Justice is inside all of us, not a product of intellect but of the spirit. Your oath is to the constitution; shield yourself behind it. Without your conviction, democracy is but a concept.I would like to say more about law, democracy and about our beloved country. But time does not permit. In any event, I have to be careful. The more we say, the more vulnerable we become. But my parting message is this: The people of goodwill must continue to strive to bring about change, so that we can rebuild the trust of all Malaysians. From that trust, we can rebuild the country where we do not live in fear, but in freedom; that the rights of all Malaysians are acknowledged, respected and protected by the system of law that is just and fair. There is no quest more honourable and a struggle more worthy of sacrifice.

Reading My Students’ Blogs

October 29th, 2008

I have been reading my students’ blogs over the last few days. Reading their blogs, as I have done many others before them over the last few years, I can almost guess which postings were written under coercion (my students are required to make a minimum of 15 posting over a 14-week period) and which of my students have eased into almost a habit of making their own postings.I read my students’ blogs to evaluate them – I need to see their reflection on their learning process. Reading their postings is not always a chore. I often enjoy reading them. Besides evaluating how well they have reflected on the things that happened in our classes and also on their own learning experiences in relation to the course work, I also get a lot of feedback on what happens in my classes. Every semester, I would get a few gems in some of my students’ postings. This semester the posting that stood out was a student’s response to reading an extract from ‘The Mahabharata’. The extract is on the episode when a son, Devavrata, gives up not only his claim to his father’s kingdom but chooses a life of celibacy so that his father could marry a fisherman’s daughter. The fisherman would only consent to the marriage if his daughter’s children are to be heirs to the throne. For his son’s sacrifice the king, Shantanu, gives him a boon: “You will be invincible in war and you will die only when you choose to. Death will await you.” Most of the students had   responded positively to the extract. One student’s response was a pleasant surprise as her blog indicated that she had given much thought and I really found what she said interesting and thought-provoking.

Click on this link to read Lennymia Anak Niwin’s response entitled “Sacrifice in the name of love”:

http://mialenny.blogspot.com/2008_07_01_archive.html

 

Could have been better

October 20th, 2008

I am not one who enjoys attending convocations. Despite the pomp in Malaysian university convocations, much of it is dull … until you see a familiar face coming up on stage to receive a degree.

However, attending the first session of the 32nd UPM Convocation was a little more meaningful for me as I was going to see two groups of students who I had taught graduate and I was actually happy to attend the event. Four of my doctoral students, I chaired 3 of these students’ supervisory committee and was a member for one of them, were being conferred their degrees. Another group of about 60 Bachelor of Education (TESL) students were also receiving their degrees. So there were quite few familiar faces to keep me looking at the stage.

It would have been wonderful if my Masters students (around 40 this time) and another group of about 50 Bachelor of Education (TESL) students from the 1st UPM-IPTI cohort were also there. But unfortunately, they were being conferred their degrees in another session.

On the plus side, I had quite few people to see at the convocation session and was rather pleased to be there, a rare occasion indeed. And to top it all, one of the Bachelor of Education (TESL) graduate – Aini Marina bt. Ma’rof was the recipient of the Chancellor’s Gold Medal, the highest award given to a student at the annual convocation.

Just when I was having some good feelings about the whole thing, the convocation proceedings took to a turn which left a bad taste (at the least) in my mouth when the graduating students’ representative came up to give the speech. I had hoped an undergraduate would have been given the privilege but that was not the case. A doctoral graduate stood at the rostrum. And lo and behold who was chosen? A known Malaysian politician! I guess the university was taking pride in that he had chosen UPM to carry out his doctoral research …. His was a polished speech not quite that of a budding graduate who will be making the transition from campus life to the unexplored world of work. It was not the voice of a young Malaysian who was taking his first steps into the real world which was what I wanted to hear.

 I was just too glad to have it all over with and get out of the hall.