Sunday, September 15, 2013

Between Two Malaysias

I can't remember the first time I heard the word Malaysia. It had come into existence many years before I was even born. When I was forced to learn geography or Ilmu Alam as it was then called and memorise country names, the name of this country had already been in use for almost two decades. Although the spelling was universally accepted, saying the word is still not settled. Now, even after half a century, I still hear people pronounce it in various ways. The kampung folks would say Me-lei-sia, while the hard-tongued Mat Salleh can be excused for choosing Me-lei-zia. The more urban Malaysians meanwhile, go with Me-lei-sye, presumably stressing the “sy” makes them sound closer to the Mat Salleh’s tongue. Whatever three syllables that they utter, it is understood as Malaysia, that federation of states formed at the South Eastern corner of the Asian continent and the northern part of Borneo Island separated by a shallow body of water that is South China Sea. I was born and bred on the side attached to the bigger landmass but work has taken me to the island part of the Federation.

I must admit that people from the part of Malaysia where I was born are largely ignorant of their fellow countrymen from the part of Malaysia I am living now. Perhaps because they are attached to the biggest landmass on the planet, or may be because the sight of the tallest twin buildings in the world is blocking their view, the West Malaysians have wrongly assumed that they are mainstream and that those living in the small towns at the edge of the jungle along the many rivers on the Island side somehow matter less in the making of Malaysia. One of my East Malaysian colleagues once told me how East Malaysians are deeply offended when visitors from West Malaysia keep saying they are from Malaysia when asked where they come from by Sarawakian or Sabahan as if these two states were not part of Malaysia.

Being Malay and Muslim which represent more than half of Malaysians, we are also guilty of insisting that everything has to be done our way. We assume people with such names as Idris bin Jala is a Malay Muslim and are embarrassed to find out later that he's neither Malay nor Muslim. While it is safe in Peninsula Malaysia to say Assalamualaikum and invite somebody who looks like a Malay to pray at one’s local mosque, one should be more sensitive and neutral here lest the invitee may be offended. He might just politely decline and tell you that he usually meets his God on Sunday. And while he may also call Him Allah, he meets Him not in the mosque but in the church. I once worked with somebody who kept a goatee and looked indistinguishable from a Malay. He had a smile and soft demeanor of a deeply religious man about to ask you to go to the mosque. But when he took off his work coverall, I was shocked to discover that he had tattoos on his arms and legs. Only then did I know that he was an Iban. For the Iban tattooing is part of their culture and tradition. Later I found out that a colleague who had Muslim name and appearance was actually a Christian Melanau and somebody else who had a Christian name was, to my surprise, a Muslim. While the Iban use anak in their name, some non-Muslim who are native tribes here use bin or binti to mean son or daughter of. Those are instances of the culture shock that I experienced when I first got here a few years ago.

I thought I knew Malaysia, my country of birth and my home for more than four decades, but arriving here I discovered how wrong I was. What I thought I knew was only the mainstream Malaysia, the narrative that’s presented in the mainstream media and even textbooks. Many people here would argue that while we say that this country is multi-racial, multi religious and multi cultural, our actions are not reflective of it. The mainstream narratives are still one sided. Our political parties from both sides of the political divide, our unions, associations and clubs are still largely Peninsular-centric. Development projects are still largely associated with the Peninsula. While it is understandable to bring more development in West Malaysia because of the denser population and the resultant economies of scale there, many East Malaysians feel that they are being neglected. Although the two states of Sabah and Sarawak contribute much to the federal state coffer through incomes from their natural resources, the infrastructure here is still second class to what is being enjoyed by West Malaysians. Even after 50 years they are still waiting for the long promised Trans-Borneo Highway linking the towns along the coast of Sarawak and Sabah. May be they are too polite to tell us West Malaysians directly but I can’t help but feel their resentment at West Malaysia who seem to suck out the riches from their land and pipe them all to the West.

The status quo for the last 50 years has to change. The people from West Malaysia should understand more about the ways of East Malaysia. The mainstream media should be truly inclusive in educating and making us all aware about East Malaysia. Our leaders from West Malaysia should care and look more towards the East. We cannot truly celebrate 50 years of our coming together knowing there is growing resentment among our East Malaysian brothers and sisters towards the West. West Malaysians would not want to be labeled as neo-colonial masters. The early leaders of Sabah and Sarawak did not kick out the White Rajah and the British only to be replaced by colonial master of their own kind. Let’s celebrate this Malaysia day as equals.

Happy 50th Malaysia Day!

Friday, September 13, 2013

Independent No More

In the old days Colonists would go to a country looking for its natural resources. They scrambled for the minerals, native plants or pre-historic artifacts from far corners of the Earth. Some made peace with the local people and came in as advisors to the local chiefs while some used force and carted away anything they could get from the conquered land. Under the pretext of bringing the word of God and civilizing the barbarians, they justified their exploitations. Over centuries, they extracted the minerals and use them to industrialise their country, develop sophisticated weapons and gadgets and sell them back to us. This is easy to see and sadly it is still happening in some parts of the world.

While this kind of crude physical colonization is on the way out, a new form of control is on the rise. We are all willing participants of this new colonization and we don’t even know it. The threat now is less obvious although the impact on less developed world and the majority of the people is still the same. What is being promoted as democracy and free access to information can also be seen from the dark side.

A wise man once said that “knowledge is power”. It is more relevant now than ever. All the data that we create and upload about ourselves is information. This information can be converted into knowledge and knowledge thus brings power. So it’s not hard to imagine that all the data – text, photos, videos - we’re giving away for free to Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo, Google, WhatsApp or what not is like giving away our power to those who receive, collect, analyse and use it for their own good.

We are living in the age of Big Data where companies offer free services so that they could collect our data, analyse and use it to sell things to us. On a more ominous side, they collect our data so they could spy on us. They know our location every day, they know what we buy, what we say and they even know what we think. The unfortunate thing is these companies with terabytes of data collected from us are based in foreign countries. Their servers are physically located in their own country and they are subjected to their own law which empowers their intelligence agency to have access to these data and monitor anybody they wish. The current drama revealed by the Snowden leak case about the existence of government funded online spying program Prism shows that the countries with heaviest surveillance on their own people and foreigners are not the ex-Soviet so-called Iron Curtain countries but the self-proclaimed champions of democracy like the US and the UK.

We need to realize that the power of the future is not measured in barrels but in bits and bytes. And we’re giving our data to large corporations based in foreign countries without realizing that every byte of data they store is like drops of oil running their engine. These data may be used against us if they think that we’re not following their wishes. Remember, these corporations are based in the same countries which used to exploit our natural resources and our people to enrich and empower their own citizens in previous centuries. This is just colonization in a new cloak. It is an excuse to spy and control people under the pretext of freedom and democratization of information.

When Big Brother is watching it is not necessarily a good thing, especially when you know that the Brother has a stated objective of making everybody eat, sleep, talk, buy and think like them. So think about it when you press “Agree” button the next time you sign up for a free service online. It may look free now, but you are paying it with your own freedom. We are all sometimes too willing a participant in this wholly connected world. You may think you are free now, but with every byte of data about yourself that you give away you slowly inch forward into an online prison. This is the world we’re living now, a world where independence has no real meaning but surrendering yourself to watchful eyes from the opposite side of the world.



Selamat Hari Merdeka!