By AB Sulaiman
In my earlier but one commentary, I stated that the Malay problem is the root cause of the nation’s problems. Soon after it was published on Jan 6, a dear friend and former office colleague sent me a note.
Ali (not his real name) agreed with my observation but disagreed strongly with my suggestion that one of the ways of solving ‘the Malay problem’ would be to secularise the Malay mind. He seemed to be saying, “Yes I agree with all your observations so long as you don’t ask the Malay to secularise his thinking”.
His reaction was all too familiar, for secularism is considered a dirty word, amounting to blasphemy and apostasy, to the Malay community – a major sin in orthodox Malay reckoning.
But Ali, and those who think like and agree with him, can be no more wrong. Here’s why:
What does secularism mean in the first place? A noted British sociologist, Bryan Wilson, defines it as “The process whereby religious thinking, practices and institutions lose social significance.”
I’d go back to the time when nation states were developing in Europe to appreciate this definition a bit more.
In the early formation of the state, power was concentrated in the Church, hat is, in the hands of the clergy or priestly class. Religion was so powerful that not only the people but even the King was under its centralised control. (Note: The word ‘Church’ of course is symbolic of ‘religion’, specifically Christianity; and ‘King’ of ‘state’).
But I suppose the individual human spirit is born free, and did not quite accept the perpetual bondage of religion. So, in the course of history, the people were getting increasingly tired of the Church. In the Reformation period (about the 16th century onwards) they rebelled against it.
The rebellion came from two quarters, the intelligentsia on one part and the King on the other. Some of the followers of the Church, like John Calvin and Martin Luther, developed their own interpretation of the Christian scriptures. They ‘rebelled’ against the Catholic orthodoxy and formed their own denominations. They are generally called Reformists.
In the case of the King, I take Henry VIII as an example. He wanted the Church to annul his marriage with Catherine of Aragon to marry Anne Boleyn, but the Church refused. Henry VIII ‘rebelled’ by creating the Protestant church, divorcing Catherine and marrying Anne Boleyn.
Transfer of power to the people
The effect of this rebellion saw state power transferred from the clergy to the monarchy and people.
But the King, a mere human, soon got involved in excesses he used to practise even before his escape from the priestly clutches.
He was, after all, the absolute monarchist in a feudal setting. This made the people angry all over again. Soon they rebelled against the King. Just look at what happened in France in 1789. They guillotined the royalty and nobility in the streets of Paris while the people cheered!
The effect this time was that the monarchy was sidelined; state power from then on was completely transferred to the people. For the first time in human history, the individual experienced and enjoyed complete freedom from religion and the state.
Secularisation in other words split the people on two quantum occasions: one, from the clutches of the church, and two, from the monarchy. State power then belonged to the people.
President Lincoln of the US recorded and described it as ‘the government of the people, by the people and for the people’. Note that religion and King were not even mentioned in this classic definition.
Individual freedom
The personal freedom brought about by the clergy-monarchy-people split brought with it the sense of the individual to the fore.
It allowed the growth and maturing of the spirit of the individual. He is responsible for his own progress, his freedom and his opportunity to develop his own talent, skills and individual spirit; so long, of course, this is done within the confines of the law.
This spirit enables a person to develop his own sense of pride and dignity, his own mertabat (dignity and honour); and find satisfaction and happiness in his own accomplishments.
What this means in turn is that it places the value, autonomy and benefits of the individual over that of the group (or race), society or nation. It makes the individual the prime unit in a social system. He is his own boss.
The independence of the individual gives rise to the development of human rights. He has the right of speech and expression, of religion and marriage, and to seek his own happiness. Mainly, it gives the person the ability to think independently make decisions based on the best alternatives available to him.
Scientific knowledge
The growth of the personal freedom of the individual, and of individual thinking, coincides with the growth of human knowledge, especially in science or scientific knowledge.
Science in turn is understanding nature. For example, science tells that lightning is electricity, not a sign of an angry God way up in the sky. It says that all living things have shape and size, ‘body’ temperature, and move about no faster than the speed of light.
All living things exist following the laws of physics, and that this law operates independent of a god. Gravity, for example, operates whether god exists or not.
An increasing understanding of nature leads to human control over it. To illustrate, matter when heated expands, and water expands into steam. With this knowledge, the steam engine was invented.
There was the rise in technological advancements. There was the rise in invention of new tools and implements, like the microscope and more powerful telescopes.
Early trains were powered by the steam engine. The combined harvester could plough huge acreages of wheat fields, so much so that large-scale farming was made possible. And today. we have the amazing computer.
The rise in scientific knowledge and the invention of tools have given the human civilisation the ability to look deeper into the minute world and further into the length and breadth of the universe.
Democratic principles
There are several other principles and tenets of democracy worth mentioning here. The first is the development and rise of the rule of law. The rule of law must prevail in society, otherwise there will be chaos.
Second, there is the system of check-and-balance between the legislature, executive and judiciary.
Third, there is the election process of identifying and appointing political leaders in a democratic system of government.
Fourth, there is the full participation of the people in the running of the country. The general population is given the opportunity to participate in the debate for the formulation of public policies. This is done via the conduit of the civic societies, the mass media or by direct communication with the people’s elected representatives.
Engines of growth
It turns out that the combination of the individual spirit (I), the progress and development of scientific knowledge (S) and the development of democracy (D) have pushed human civilisation to faster and greater progress.
In other words the ISD combination is the engine of growth of the human civilisation. I am therefore making the assumption here that there is a high correlation between ISD countries with the progress and development of the human civilisation.
Consider the following:
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All of the early European nations experiencing the Industrial Revolution were experiencing the development of the individual spirit and the scientific progress, for example the UK and Germany.
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All developed and advanced economies are democratic. Today there are few non-ISD developed countries. China, being socialist, is non-ISD, However, one can testify to the mushrooming number of entrepreneurs and capitalists there.
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Their peoples are highly literate, knowledgeable and comfortable with science and technology.
Today, virtually all highly developed nations are ISD. Just look at the US, Western Europe, Australia, Japan and South Korea.
People power
Critics might say that for a country to progress, there must be many factors existing in the economic make-up. There must be sufficient infrastructure, for example roads and bridges, schools and hospitals existing in the country.
There must be sufficient raw materials like coal, oil, iron, and such. There must be people with fairly high purchasing power to start the consumer base of the economy.
But while admitting that the availability of raw materials and infrastructure are essential, they can never equate the ‘I’ (namely the enterprising human spirit) as part of the ISD equation.
Look at Japan. It is a group of hilly islands with poor raw material resources. It had hardly anything but people, people and more people. Before the World War II few would guess it would become an economic behemoth from the 1960s till to-date. It has been able to do so because of the quality of its human resource, its high ‘I’ factor.
South Korea’s is a similar story. Again after the World War II, few could imagine it would become the economic superpower it is today. The country is basically barren and does not have any raw materials in any meaningful quantity. Yet, like Japan, they delivered their country as a member of the highly economically productive ISD nations.
Then, take the case of little city-states that have nothing but people, people and more people, as in the cases of Hong Kong and Singapore. They have developed a dynamic economy out of nothing but the spirit and enterprise of their people.
Malay experience
Malaysia is a most sorry case of economic non-performance in the world community of nations. In the early Sixties, we were at an even level with modern power-houses like Singapore, Japan, Korea and Taiwan.
We had all of the prerequisites of development some of them did not have. We have the land, the people, the system of administration, the raw materials and perhaps even the capital to compete and shine in the world arena.
Today, these countries are in the ISD league, but we are trying to join them, not now, but in 2020. Judging by the look of things, we are not about getting there. Why?
Because we have been led by the Ketuanan Melayu (KM) polity which, unfortunately, has the following European pre-Reformation features:
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The general Malay person has little sense of the individual. His focus is towards communal (call it racist) interest and solidarity. He lacks confidence and considers himself weak, thereby dependent on government largesse.
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KM created an education system focussing not on science and technology, but on principles like morality, cultural values and religion.
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Malay political leaders consider it to their advantage to retain the feudal monarchical system of government. Democracy in this country is nothing more beyond a general election every four or five years.
The KM polity operates on the platform of untuk agama, bangsa dan negara (for religion, race and nation). These are ‘un-ISD’ principles.
Catch-22
Malaysia has not yet experienced the ISD reformation, because:
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The Malay individual is still expecting special treatment to cure his lack of confidence. It looks like the New Economic Policy and its successors are here to stay. He is protecting his mertabat at other people’s expense.
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Religion is not for the individual to choose, but the government ‘chooses’ it for him or her.
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The people are fragmented into ‘Malays’ and ‘non-Malays’. This is no way of creating a one-race, one-nation, 1Malaysia political entity.
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Good, young and talented people are running away to other countries. One, Singapore, is very happy with this.
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Foreign investment is low, while domestic capital is running away. The recent Global Financial Integrity revelation that between 2002 and 2008 as much as US$291 billion have been illegally siphoned out of the country would just make this issue dire.
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Public institutions are breaking down. The education system is such that the universities are producing graduates who can’t think or able to have meaningful communication or other social interaction. The legal system is an international joke.
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Don’t talk about the essence of democracy in this country: the rule of law has become the rule of men. Equality and fairness is for the connected. Belief in religion (Islam) is mandatory.
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Corruption is epidemic. as hinted by (iv) above.
How can Malaysia get out of this rut? It’s a complex question with no definite answers. But I propose one possible solution – by it becoming an ISD nation!
So, to my friend Ali and others with similar thinking, there is, after all, something to be said for the Malays to begin accepting secularism as a cure for this ‘Malay problem’.
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AB SULAIMAN is an observer of human traits and foibles, especially within the context of religion and culture. As a liberal, he marvels at the way orthodoxy fights to maintain its credibility in a devilishly fast-changing world. He hopes to provide some understanding to the issues at hand and wherever possible, suggest some solutions. He holds a Bachelor in Social Sciences (Leicester, UK) and a Diploma in Public Administration, Universiti Malaya.
#1 by dagen on Monday, 7 February 2011 - 5:12 pm
But cintanegara is quiely happy with having nothing but his rambutans. Ahhhh … tu dia, life jenis umno.
#2 by yhsiew on Monday, 7 February 2011 - 6:39 pm
///Today, these countries are in the ISD league, but we are trying to join them, not now, but in 2020. Judging by the look of things, we are not about getting there. Why?///
Why? The reason is simple: The cream of the crop have already left the country and more are going to follow in their footsteps. We cannot blame them because they have to find a way out if they are not welcome in their own country.
#3 by ktteokt on Monday, 7 February 2011 - 8:06 pm
Malaysia has become the PERPETUAL “Land of the Jellyfishes”!!!!!
#4 by tunglang on Monday, 7 February 2011 - 10:04 pm
To say there is no need of God to progress in secularism, please take a look at the nation Israel.
Before the nation state was formed in 1948, the Palestinian land was but a dry desert wasteland (where there was no record of rain for thousand of years), devoid of any hope for agriculture or city development. Now you can see a lot of greenery, human population and discovered natural resources like oil and minerals, and the miraculous rainfall.
Judaism is a central feature of the country and plays a major role in shaping Israeli culture, lifestyle and progress in science, technology and business. It is examplary of a nation that lives by, practices and upholds its religious belief (65% of Israeli Jews believe in God / 85% participate in a Passover seder).
To return to a hostile land in the 1940’s and progressed in mere 4 decades to become a regional super power and hi-tech industrial prowess is no mere human ingenuity or luck or US backing.
In this context, God’s promise and omni-presence is not to be taken lightly or dismissed for the sake of 3-dimensional modernist, scientific progress hypothesis.
To quote American astronomer, astrophysicist, cosmologist Carl Sagan:
My deeply held belief is that if a god of anything like the traditional sort exists, our curiosity and intelligence are provided by such a god. We would be unappreciative of those gifts if we suppressed our passion to explore the universe and ourselves. On the other hand, if such a god does not exist, our curiosity and our intelligence are the essential tools for managing our survival. In either case, the enterprise of knowledge is consistent with both science and religion, and is essential for the welfare of our species.
#5 by Godfather on Monday, 7 February 2011 - 10:41 pm
You don’t need to move to secularism to advance this country. Firm religious beliefs in true compliance with the holy books would be fine, because all religions teach us to be good, virtuous, and avoid the sins of theft, debauchery and the taking of lives.
UMNO are nothing more than a bunch of hypocrites who steal, commit unspeakable crimes against humanity and do things that would make the Prophet puke. They control the media and the prosecutory organs, so they do not get caught, and they suppress the truth. These traits are not in accordance with Islam, but they get away with it. Because they can, and they just ignore your rants and accusations.
In the 60s and 70s, the UMNO support base consists of poor and illiterate peasants. Then UMNO invented the crutch which has become like an addiction, and UMNO indoctinates the belief that anyone who tries to take away the crutch should be criminalised. As the support base became more educated, and as more and more Malays go overseas, the indoctrination became less effective, so Mamakthir started another type of indoctrination – the fear of losing one’s identity of race and religion. So UMNO narrowed the confines of what the average Muslim can or cannot do, all in the name of “solidarity” and “unification”. Anyone who goes against this solidarity is an enemy of Islam.
As time wears on, even this indoctrination isn’t going to work, as the world becomes flat, and as more and more alternative media get to report the real hypocrisy of UMNO warlords – boozing, womanising, amassing assets overseas with unexplained gains, billions upon billions of new projects awarded to cronies and relatives without any tender.
Someone is going to wake up and tell UMNO: Why are you committing all these sins if you know that it is against Islam ? When the masses wake up, that’s when a spark can ignite a revolution similar to the likes of Tunisia and Egypt. And this is what is worrying Mamakthir.
#6 by tak tahan on Monday, 7 February 2011 - 11:01 pm
I think how we cry and laugh about the must change factors will be no purpose to be achieved with umno government unless we have it removed and kiss it off (steamy urgingly) good bye for good.Then the hope is there within our grips.
#7 by drago2008 on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 12:49 am
This country is going down the road to purgatory. We can never see a renaisance unless the Malay problem is nipped in the bud. The bud is the present government under the so-called BN which is basically a mask for the one that pulls the string and call the shots – Umno.
Look at the personalities of those running the show or the lack of it. Most of them are plain sycophants, some are holding office but can’t even string together a simple statement in public. They cannot articulate any issues in a rational manner or show any semblance of decency with their behaviour.
How do they expect people to respect them, only those with half-baked intelligence will kow tow to them.
Hats off to AB Sulaiman for articulating the problem this country is facing now. There is a light at the end of the tunnel but blocking the way is BN/Umno.
#8 by tak tahan on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 2:03 am
Ne..ver min..d,ne..ver min..d,do..n’t worr…y.We have first lady here to kautim everything where there is lack of actions from the incapability public servants.Don’t think lowly of her yo.I started to very admire her even without any lawful and non member as an elected MP or as par as with PM role as she has been craving so much to represent but she proved to take on everything that holds our country at stake despite of our unavailable legitimate inaction ministers to dutifully take appropriate counter methods.The King of Arab also obediently listen to her attentively,you don’t know?.”Main main lagi ke?Setakat tahap ini i cuma buat 1 call to dia and he King Abdullah immediately had to respond pada i”.I boleh kautim everything if the first man also cannot handle, you know?You want the first man or first lady?” as she was telling the crowd as i heard and i felt relieved now.What say you,no say le?
#9 by tak tahan on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 2:17 am
http://malaysiansmustknowthetruth.blogspot.com/2011/02/first-class-crisis-management-by-datin.html
#10 by Jeffrey on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 6:53 am
I hope AB Sulaiman will continue with his writings. Many an “observer of human traits and foibles” like he self described himself are a minority but never mind the rest demur for when one speaks the truth, the rest are cheap whiskey. .Necessarily the likes of him and his views are not liked. Iconoclasts – like Socrates of Greece 2000 years ago, Polish Renaissance astronomer, Nicolaus Copernicus (19 February 1473 – 24 May 1543) and Irish playwright Sir Bernard Shaw (26 July 1856 – 2 November 1950) – were also not liked because they exposed and ridiculed the “foibles” and sham of traditional cherished beliefs, practices, or doctrines in the cause of advancement of people’s thoughts!
What AB Sulaiman says here should not be misconstrued as implying that he stands for the separation of God & Religious beliefs from Man! He does not.
For no man who believes in the Freedom of Thought and hence respects an Atheist’s or Agnostic’s right to non beliefs would, at the same time, denigrate another man’s right to belief in God or Religion!
What I think AB Sulaiman stands for is the separation of Religion from the State/Government! In other words keep Religion in the private sphere to be separated from the public sphere.
As far as the State and government goes, it is neutral to all faiths as well as non faiths, neither promoting nor persecuting (like early Romans of Christians) any particular faith. This is the central theme of Secularism!
History is however replete with lack of wisdom when societies take a route departing from the secular.
It begins with a group of elites who by themselves may not be particularly staunch in religious beliefs and observances (except for perhaps the Money God).
However they make sure that those whom they control are religious. Religion is central mechanism for them to have political control of society and the people to do their biddings. In no time there are so many religious zealots within government and bureaucracy that they in turn control the elites and people instead legitimizing their claim to influence based on their supposedly superior knowledge of God, God’s laws, Morality and the Hereafter. They strike fear in the hearts of man and by doing control their thoughts.
Those who stand for Secularism in the sense of the separation of Religion and the State, keeping Religion in the private realm and not public sphere, a matter of choice and not aggressive promotion by the powers-that-be do so not because they want to separate any individual from God or Religion – but to protect Religion from the grasp of Government and in turn protect our government from the grasp of religious fanatics and fanaticism inimical to expression of freedom of thoughts of others and by extension the advancement of society in all fields of endeavours arising from the freedom of thought as a habit.
#11 by Taikohtai on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 7:05 am
I think Malaysia will now regret sending over 10,000 students to Egypt. Having a taste of revolution, these students now realise that they have the power to topple a government, especially an unjust one. Najis should be scared of the idea at his very doorstep, given rising food prices and cost of living. Viva la revolusi!!
#12 by k1980 on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 9:06 am
A warm welcome to the newest nation in the world> Hope their leaders would not turn out to be thieves like umno’s
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/08/world/africa/08sudan.html?ref=global-home
#13 by boh-liao on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 9:20 am
Time too 4 Sabahans n Sarawakians 2 decide 2 secede fr UmnoB’s M’sia
How about North Peninsular Malaya and South Peninsular Malaya?
#14 by Bigjoe on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 10:42 am
The issue with secularism and Malay is that brand of opportunistic politics brought by Mahathir and attempt to coopt Islam for their political purpose, sold the idea that secularism means absolute separation of religion and state AND ungodly.
Secularism means ‘of this world’. It just means reason over faith i.e., you can’t use faith as a convenient basis of argument. If reason says that people need faith, then its still secular. It does not have to be absolute separation of state and religion or ungodly – just that we try to our best effort not to look for answer in religion or god in state affairs and we would be better off if we succeed in doing so..
#15 by johnnypok on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 10:55 am
A big scale civil war will break out if the present style of governing the nation is allowed to continue.
Sabah and Sarawak should pull out as soon as possible, and run their respective countries like Singapore.
#16 by sotong on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 11:20 am
The problem is our racist and divisive ” leaders “.
They are playing games for their survival.
#17 by k1980 on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 1:31 pm
http://www.sun2surf.com/article.cfm?id=57268
We are fair without having to pour SK2 skin-whitening lotion on our bodies.
#18 by TheWrathOfGrapes on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 2:23 pm
I don’t think anyone is saying you don’t need god. Some people believe in god(s), some don’t. Some believe in god in their heart and mind, but others wear god on their sleeves.
I think the author is simply saying keep religions out of politics and governance.
Malaysia used to be secular. Then came PAS. And because PAS was rapidly eroding UMNO’s support, Mahathir decided to out-Islam PAS. The result is the gradual encroachment of religion into politics. Now politics in Malaysia is all about religion, race and money.
Singapore is a good example. The government is secular. But the people are mostly religious. There is no state religion. The citizens can be Muslims, Christians, Buddhists, Taoist, whatever.
#19 by TheWrathOfGrapes on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 2:53 pm
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704422204576129663620557634.html
#20 by cemerlang on Tuesday, 8 February 2011 - 5:20 pm
There is God but He is known by many names and different ways. But everyone knows that there is 1God.
#21 by good coolie on Tuesday, 15 February 2011 - 11:55 pm
Secularism is already embodied in our constitution. A Malay, as long as he wants to be a Muslim, surrenders his freedom in many matters voluntarily. That is his faith stance. That does not make this country non-secular. Adherents of other religions also feel circumscribed by their own religious tenets. The difference is that Muslims agree that some state organs have control over their personal lives to ensure compliance with Muslim law.