When Will Kindness Prevail

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 7/27/2019 When Will Kindness Prevail

    1/5

    When will kindness prevail?BY DATUK ZAID IBRAHIM, SPECIAL TO THE MALAYSIAN INSIDER

    JULY 24, 2013LATEST UPDATE: JULY 24, 2013 04:48 PM

    Securi

    ty guards patrol at the entrance of Sekolah Kebangsaan Seri Pristana today. - The Malaysian Insider pic by

    Nazir Sufari, July 24, 2013.Another school fiasco has taken place if the reports about the

    schoolchildren in Sekolah Kebangsaan Seri Pristana in Sungai Buloh are correct.

    The children were required to use the changing room next to the toilet as a

    makeshift canteen because the canteen itself was closed for the fasting month.

    Predictably, the DPM has ordered a probe and probably the other education minister

    will express some regret over the incident. This is not the first time such ugliness has

    marred our school halls.

    In 2010, the principal of Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Tunku Abdul Rahman

    Putra in Johor made it to the news for making racial remarks against her Chinese

    and Indian students.

    Typically, in such incidents after the furor has died down all is forgotten.

    1

  • 7/27/2019 When Will Kindness Prevail

    2/5

    Then another incident unfolds because Malay and Muslim administrators do not think

    non-Malays and non-Muslims are important enough to be treated with respect and

    dignity.

    What has happened is the result of heightened Malay-Muslim consciousness,

    promoted by politicians and Islamic bureaucrats who-under the cloak of race and in

    some cases religion or both-want to be identified as champions of their race and

    religion.

    But by invoking false ideologies of patriotism and Islamisation, they have invaded the

    public space and filled the minds of the people with so much indoctrinal nonsense

    that some Malays and Muslims have forgotten basic human decency and moral

    values in their interpersonal relationship with others.

    The process has numbed the conscience of these administrators, a conditiondescribed by our Malay elders as "hilang hati perut".

    It means they have lost their sense of fairness, empathy and understanding and can

    no longer appreciate the consequence of their actions on others who do not belong

    to their group.

    They simply no longer care enough.

    These false champions of their race and religion then blame non-Malays and non-

    Muslims for being insensitive.

    Just this morning a deputy minister blamed the Chinese for organising a beauty

    contest knowing about the fatwa issue, implying the Chinese must also follow the

    fatwa.

    Some silly bloggers may have given them the ammunition to justify what they say,

    but by and large, non-Malays and non-Muslims have always been respectful of

    Malays and Muslims for as long as I can remember.

    For many years after independence, the Chinese and Indians have always stayed in

    the background and known their place under the Malaysian sun.

    In fact, their reluctance to be involved was interpreted as apathy and unwillingness to

    be involved in nation-building.

    Now, the younger generation wants to have a say and for that they are accused of

    being ungrateful.

    2

  • 7/27/2019 When Will Kindness Prevail

    3/5

    Suddenly, these young Malaysians are being labelled as unpatriotic.

    A special course on nationhood has been invoked by no less a figure than the

    Regent of Perak, implying that non-Malays and non-Muslims are found wanting in

    their sense of national loyalty.

    On the contrary, I believe that, if at all, the ones who need to undergo a course on

    nationhood are Malays and Muslims who have forgotten that there are Malaysians

    who are unlike them.

    I am tired of listening to some of our so-called leaders hand out their prescriptions for

    what ails the country.

    The non-Malays and non-Muslims must stand up for their rights; because only then

    will we have a country of equals.

    The Malays will also benefit from this situation where people are treated as they

    should be treated, with fairness and equanimity.

    The real culprits for the present day distortion are the Malays who always blame the

    Chinese for their shortcomings, and the false Muslim preachers who teach the

    Muslims to have an all-consuming fear of God but then conveniently forget that Allah

    commands us to look after our fellow beings more than ourselves.

    What ails the country are these false teachings and false ideologies that are bereft of

    human decency and dignity, making meaningful relationships among the people of

    this country difficult to achieve.

    So on his 60th birthday, can we have our PM (Prime Minister) say and do something

    that will right the moral compass of good behaviour between Malays and non-

    Malays?

    Remove the distorting prism that guides our present actions purely on the basis of

    race or beliefs.

    Can we agree that Malaysians of whatever group are human beings first, and thatthey deserve equal and fair treatment?

    Advanced countries put a premium on developing a caring and compassionate

    society and so should we.

    3

  • 7/27/2019 When Will Kindness Prevail

    4/5

    Success certainly cannot be measured by GDP (gross domestic product) and per

    capita income alone. - July 24, 2013.

    Wanted in Malaysia: EmpathyNEWS ANALYSIS BY THE MALAYSIAN INSIDER

    JULY 24, 2013LATEST UPDATE: JULY 24, 2013 01:03 PM

    How did Malaysia come to this point? Where billions have been spent on national

    unity programmes, Bangsa Malaysia initiatives and grandiose 1Malaysia schemes

    and yet EMPATHY for each other is so glaringly missing from daily life.

    The Oxford Dictionary defines empathy as the ability to understand and share the

    feelings of another. Some may see it as "standing in someone else's shoes" or

    "seeing through someone else's eyes".

    Whatever the definition, implicit in it is a feeling of compassion for another.

    If the feeling of empathy courses through the veins of Malaysians, we would be very

    slow to ridicule the religious practices of another or even place each other in racial

    pigeonholes. Very slow. Because we would feel the hurt that a wayward word or

    action could cause another group of Malaysians.

    In addition, we would be quick to condemn or disapprove of behaviour not in keeping

    with our national psyche.

    That is why the incident at SK Seri Pristina in Sungai Buloh is disappointing,

    depressing and frankly, deflating.

    Why couldn't the headmaster put himself in the shoes of the non-Muslim students

    and see how wrong it was to make them have their canteen break in a shower room

    during the fasting month?

    Why didn't the afternoon school supervisor put himself in the shoes of the parent

    who complained about the insensitive and unsatisfactory eating arrangement?

    Why didn't any of the teachers tell the headmaster or school supervisors that no

    Malaysian child should be treated in this manner in his own country?

    4

  • 7/27/2019 When Will Kindness Prevail

    5/5

    Anecdotal evidence suggests that an increasing number of Malaysians have grown

    calluses in our hearts and that as long as hardship or injustice does not affect our

    kin, it is not something to be concerned about.

    Unfortunately, in the Malaysia of today, our speed of response and empathy is

    dictated by race or religion, not citizenry or the simple fact that offering a helping

    hand or fighting for the cause of another is the right thing to do.

    Perhaps, it is a by-product of looking at everything in this country through racial and

    religious lenses and believing that everything is a zero-sum game. Perhaps it is a

    natural progression from a country where racial polarisation has reached a point

    where colour of skin trumps place of birth.

    Today, the children at SK Seri Pristina will be allowed to consume their food in the

    canteen. Not because the school administrators suffered an attack of conscience butbecause they are obeying an order from the Education Ministry. No empathy here

    just a grudging respect for the power on hiring and firing which the ministry

    possesses.

    In slightly over a month, the Malaysian government will put on another grand parade

    to celebrate Merdeka, roll out a couple of heart-tugging Petronas advertisements of

    Malays, Chinese, Indians, Sikhs and Kadazandusuns smiling and hugging each

    other.

    Increasingly, that picture of postcard-perfect happiness and love for each other only

    belongs in postcards and in advertisements.

    In most parts of Malaysia, empathy is missing. - July 24, 2013.

    5