- Art
Harun
JULY
24,
2013
I am blessed.
So are many of my friends who are of
or around my age.
So are many who are older than
me.
As a child of the 60s, I went through
my formative years in an English-stream school. It was a big school in
town.
And there were
hundreds of us Malays, Chinese and Indian boys (it wasn't
co-ed).
Our first headmaster was a Chinese
gentleman who was as fierce as they came those days.
When he left, he was replaced by an
Indian gentleman, who also was as fierce.
My first class teacher was Ms Leong, all
long haired and short skirted.
And yes, armed with a wooden ruler,
she would knock my knuckles for failing to properly write the number
8.
My first English sentence, learnt on
the first day at school was to be uttered after raising my right hand, "Please
teacher may I go out?"
That was to be said if any of us had
to go to the toilet to do the normal stuffs we all do in the toilet (and not to
eat).
Then there were Mr Linggam, Cikgu Aziz
and wife, Sharom, Mr Lee the karate guy, Mr Khor, Cikgu Mutalib and various
others.
We were a happy
bunch. We played together, ate together, learned together and of course, at
times, punished together.
And we were
equal.
In standard 5, I began fasting.
The school canteen
stayed open for the whole month.
No renovation. No
closure. Muslim and non-Muslim kids, who did not fast, ate as
usual.
If they bought a proper meal, such
like nasi lemak or mee goreng, they would eat at the
canteen.
If it was some kind of snack, they
would just eat while walking around, in the class or where
ever.
No fuss. No issue. No
problem. (AS REPEATEDLY STATED, OUR CURRENT
PROBLEMS ARE MAINLY SELF INFLICTED “INSTIGATED MAINLY BY EXTREMISTS FOR
POLITICAL SELFISH INTEREST INTEREST TO DIVIDE THE NATION!)
My impressionable years were spent in
a boarding school. It was the same scenario.
All of us,
regardless of race or religion studied together, ate together, played together
and at times, getting one or two rotan together.
Visiting a non-Malay
house was not a problem.
Eating there was not
a problem too. Sharing food with non-Muslims was not an
issue.
Things have however,
sadly, changed.
And change for the worse. Nowadays,
non-Muslims don't send their kids to national school
anymore.
They prefer to send the kids to the
vernacular schools.
The ones who could afford would send
their kids to private schools.
National schools are almost invariably
filled with Muslim/Malay students.
National schools would recite prayers
before class begin in the morning.
Quranic verses and
hadith would adorn walls in the canteen, school office and even
classes.
Ustaz and ustazah
would even ask school kids to raise their hands if their parents do not pray 5
times a day.
In secondary schools, the tudung is
not compulsory for girls - according to the Ministry of Education's circular, if
I am not mistaken - but girls without
tudung would be viewed askance by schoolmates and teachers
alike.
Due to the small
number of non-Muslim/Malay kids in national schools, the Malay kids do not have
the opportunity to mix around and integrate with non-Malays in their formative
and impressionable years.
The small number of
non-Malay kids also gives a sense of false superiority complex to the Malay kids
as well as teachers.
Thus, my race and my religion are more
important than you, your religion and everything else.
Hence the closure of the school
canteen during Ramadhan.
This is prevailing in many national
schools. Apparently, this is done to "respect" the Muslim students who are
fasting.
Forget the fact that non-Muslims do
not fast and they, like any other human beings or animals, have to eat and
drink.
Forget the fact that there are Muslim
kids who do not fast.
Anybody who just about mentions the word
"food" would have been taken as insulting Islam.
On Facebook last week, there were two
guys admonishing a hotel which advertised its breakfast package on its
page.
They viewed it as
disrespectful.
But to be fair, the two were widely
condemned by other Muslim facebookers.
The eating-in-the-changing-room
debacle yesterday is just the surface of a far unhealthier trend in
Malaysia.
Beneath that surface is a society which is
fractious, intolerant, selfish and uncompromising.
The obvious question is how did we, as
a nation, become like this? As a nation we started so
well.
The Federal Constitution was agreed
upon by consensus between three major races anchored to give-and-take and
win-win camaraderie.
There was a blemish in 1969 but that
was quickly nipped in the bud and we soldiered on.
In football, we were in the Olympic
final in 1972 and 1980.
By the law of progression, we should
be in the World Cup by now. By contrast, Japan and Korea, whom we used to beat,
were already in the quarter-finals of the World Cup.
We now struggle to beat the likes of
Vietnam and even Singapore.
Like our football team, the state of our
racial integration and inter-faith relationship has moved in reverse
gear.
Years of political posturing utilizing
religion and race have now begun to show its ugly
consequences.
The so-called
Islamisation that we embark upon, which is shorn of any meaningful spiritual
understanding of the religion, but rather born out of political necessities,
convenience and mired in political one-upmanship has now produced a nation which
is unsure of itself and a people who are fractious, angry, suspicious and at odd
with each other.
We need to take a real good look at
ourselves and examine our ways. And we need to reboot our operating system if we
want to avoid a total crash. And we need to reboot
fast. -
July 24, 2013.
Who Screwed up Malaysia???
Ask the Ex-PM of Malaysia: Mahathir
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