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Let the human in us not be coloured PDF Print
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Wednesday, 10 September 2008 09:08

Musings by Marina Mahathir

When we talk about race, we talk about groups of people, but on a day-to-day basis, it is not race that matters but the human being that we are dealing with.

WHEN I was a student in the UK, one of the most hated politicians then was Enoch Powell who was constantly railing against immigration in Britain, claiming that it would alter the British “character”.

Powell was so strident with his views – expressing them in his now infamous “Rivers of Blood” speech – that his own Conservative Party, despite years of service that had enabled the party to win elections, eventually sacked him.

This was in a country that values freedom of speech. Yet the party felt that someone as extreme as Powell could not be a member any more, not if it wanted to move forward in an inevitably changing nation. He could say what he wanted, but outside the party.

We, too, have been known to sack people whose views did not comply with what the heads of the party regarded as theirs. This is not the same as censoring them, only that they had to do it outside. Thus the dignity of the party remains intact, not tainted by what they regarded as aberrations.

No doubt, sometimes regarding people as aberrations may be unjust because in fact they represent views that simply differ from the norm.

But dealing with such issues clearly gives everyone else an idea of what the norms and aberration are. Not dealing with it creates confusion and raises the possibility that maybe the aberration is not one at all, but in fact just the public expression of the norm.

We fought so long not to stereotype our people according to race by increasing educational and economic opportunities. Yet we still see it happening.

In local schools, children are pushed into certain sports not by ability but purely by race. Thus, Punjabis must play hockey and not chess, Malays must play football and not tennis, while Chinese must only play badminton.

Is it any wonder that they don’t excel in any sport? You have to wonder where the powers-that-be in that school got their ideas from, Mein Kampf?

When we talk about race, we make the mistake of lumping together a whole bunch of human beings, with all their individual quirks, whims and fancies, into what we think is a cohesive body. But it is not. If anything, sometimes race is the most tenuous thing that holds us together.

I may have told this story before. A long time ago, as I rushed through a crowded London Underground, an old Jewish man stopped me. Taking his handkerchief out, he insisted that there was something on my jacket.

It took me a while to understand that the man had seen someone spit on me and was now offering his handkerchief to clean the spittle off.

It was then that I became aware of the awful silent insidiousness of racism, that someone could have displayed such hatred on a total stranger, based entirely on colour of skin. In a way, I should be thankful it was only spit and not something worse.

On the other hand, the same incident made me realise that while there is evil, there can also be much good. I was also a stranger to the old man but he saw me as a human being entitled to respect and dignity.

Thus he empathised with the injustice that was done to me and sought to restore my dignity by offering his handkerchief for me to clean up.

He asked for nothing in return and indeed disappeared into the crowds soon after with not a word more.

When we talk about race, we talk about groups of people, a homogenous faceless group defined by general characteristics that we think of as applicable to all of them. But on a day-to-day basis, it is not the race that matters but the human being that we are dealing with.

I had one of those telemarketing calls offering free medical check-ups the other day. Disturbed by it, I started to question the caller for details.

The woman was undoubtedly of the same race as me. But the sheer rudeness and unprofessionalism of her responses showed that she had no respect whatsoever, neither for the person she was calling nor for her own company or job.

Did it matter what race she was? No, what mattered was that she was unable to make a connection with another human being, even when she claimed to be offering something ostensibly good for me.

Given a choice between these two people, I would sooner take the old man to tea than this woman. He and I have a common respect for human beings that she did not, despite our common ethnicity. Was he the aberration or she?

Since I believe that it is human to be kind, I prefer to believe she is.

- The Star

Comments (18)Add Comment
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written by sjs, September 10, 2008 09:21:20
Marina,

A good advice for Mahathir indeed!

We support you!

Please help us to understand whether blood is not thicker than water!
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written by SocratesI, September 10, 2008 09:33:50

Good for you, Marina, as this article shows that you are no racist, having suffered at the hand (or mouth) of a racist in London !

I only hope that you realize what a HUGE ABERRATION your father, Maha-Shithead, was, and is, as compared to that rude woman that you were berating about in your story !!

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written by RitchieLow, September 10, 2008 09:43:09
Oh wow, Marina is so insightful. I see the humanist movement dawning in Malaysia finally.

"States are not moral agents, people are, and can impose moral standards on powerful institutions."

--Noam Chomsky
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written by ahmadneil, September 10, 2008 09:46:37
Marina,If you dad don't listen to you then who will he listen.Tell him to retire gracefully and enjoy his last few years in this Malaysia truly Asia.
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written by FFT, September 10, 2008 09:59:34
You have to wonder where the powers-that-be in that school got their ideas from, Mein Kampf?


Oh, don't have to go so far....have you looked closer at home? Like, saaaay, that guy walking around in a Nehru suit?
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written by hellosunshine, September 10, 2008 10:10:50
This is a story about a family corporation called Malaysia, started by a father with a few children. The 1st child is called Ahmad, the 2nd Ah Chong, the 3rd Subra and the 4th John.
The father hopes to groom the 1st child. He pampers and spoils the 1st child by spoon feeding him all the time, prevent him from mixing and playing with the other children and later, appointing him as CEO of the corporation. Whereas, the other children are left on their own devices, start from the bottom up and become street smart to survive.
What do you think will happen to the corporation called Malaysia, to the 1st child and the other children?
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written by Jun Jan, September 10, 2008 10:23:40
We fought so long not to stereotype our people according to race by increasing educational and economic opportunities. Yet we still see it happening.
------------------
Dear Marina, you should direct this question to your father. Maybe then you can understand why it is still happening.

Dont get me wring, I'm saying this not to deliberately offend you, but I believe part of the answers to your question lies with your father.

smilies/cry.gif smilies/cry.gif
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written by myke, September 10, 2008 10:40:30
With 22 yrs in hand, one could do lots of good but HE did not, instead he damaged something that needs more than 22 yrs just to undo.
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written by JohnQ, September 10, 2008 11:03:53
It's sad and one has to shake head to see that political parties sharpen their racial needles but fails to see that it is pointing back to themselves. Political suicide though? Japanese warriors has different principle in suicidal acts, my dear friends.

Way to go Marina, your dad repenting himself thru you.
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written by gungadin, September 10, 2008 11:06:29
The kind of racism described with the old man and old woman stories exists everywhere, there will always be some bigot who dislikes someone who is not like them and acts accordingly. We can't do anything about these people except ignore them that's what they deserve. This is one off personal racism.

The Enoch Powell racism and the old lady story racism are very different. It looks like we have racism of the Enoch Powell variety within the political party, what's more it looks like we have a number of local Enoch Powells now crawling out of the woodwork, now what are we going to do about them?

You make the point that even Enoch Powell had to be sacked by his party because of his racist views and his infamous speech. We too have had our equivalent "rivers of blood" speeches, have we sacked any of these people?

If the govt is unwilling to sack these "Enoch Powells", then we the electorate will conclude that you condone this kind of behaviour and we will have to sack you at the next GE (or sooner if we can).
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written by Kuku Burung, September 10, 2008 11:22:55
I totally agree with Marina. In everyone of us there is prejudice. If a person next to us is not our kind our immediate reaction is to avoid him/her. We do not see a dignified human being in that person. We sometimes allow that prejudice to run wild -- as in the case of Ahmad Ismail.

BTW, a daughter who has a different view from her dad cannot be held responsible to educate him. It is unfair to her. She is entitled to her freedom of views. Her dad might be much disliked by many, but that doesn't mean we should ridicule her.
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written by HamChak, September 10, 2008 12:05:08
Marina, let me tell you, I was an Imperial Scholar
in England during Enoch Powell's era. I must say that
even Enoch Powell is more human than Mahathir. I rather
live in a country controlled by Enoch than Mahathir.
I think your father is the Most RACIST person due to
his inferior complexicity of being an Indian Muslim.
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written by sedan, September 10, 2008 12:11:46
Let the human in us be coloured like a MAMMAK, right, Marina?
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written by slash n burn, September 10, 2008 12:17:53
How wishful your father should think the way you do, especially towards the Jewish. You see, one reason why life is beautiful is because others are different from us.
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written by HamChak, September 10, 2008 12:28:52
Oh yes, I forgotten to tell you Marina,
sorry, my old age memory is a bit slow.
I actually forgiven Mahathir for all the
ills he caused in his 22 years of era, or
should we say; 22 years of "Errors".
Ask anyone in the street, most are cursing
Mahathir and wishing he drop dead. Why is
that so? But on the other hand, people have
Full of Praise for Tengku Abdul Rahman.
Better you go and teach Mahathir to be more human.
Forget about Enoch Powell now, go and change your
father and brothers mentalities.
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written by samesamemam, September 10, 2008 13:31:12
When we talk about race, we talk about groups of people, but on a day-to-day basis, it is not race that matters but the human being that we are dealing with.
I beg to differ. Human beings don’t interact day-to-day in a vacuum. Malaysia is not a vacuum. Human beings are born, bred, schooled, socialized and politicized in a particular culture, society, religion, institution, etc. If Malaysians are born and bred in a social and political milieu, schooled in an education system, governed by certain discriminatory laws and policies that are organized in terms of race and religious preferences, on a day-to-day basis, then it will naturally nurture racism, sectarianism, bigotry and intolerance on a day-to-day basis. When leaders and lawmakers blatantly preach open racism without fear of reproach, when these same racism guides and influences everyday behaviour whether in the civil service or private; when a longstanding so-called leader can boast:

"We (the Malays) are not the type to protest and have accepted those who came to the country...."We even accorded them rights unlike other countries”

(guess who?)…then race is made to matter on a day-to-day basis. Unless you live in a vacumn-packed and sealed Malaysia.

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written by bestcoffee, September 10, 2008 14:36:41
Hi Marina Mahathir,
ohh... thatz great... u truly understand the meaning of racism. guess what, why u didnt tell this to ur racist father? don't u know that ur father created racist policies in Malaysia frm 1981 to 2003. where were u then? busy with ur charity work? or hiding behind ur dad's couch?
oh dear marina, plss stop talking about this racism when there is an evil within ur family members.
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written by My2Sens, September 10, 2008 19:30:30
Children should not be held accountable for what their parents do or did. Every adult is responsible for their own actions.

While I do not agree with all that was written by the author in this article, I do agree with most of it.

It is heartening that she has matured into a colour blind adult (how many of us can say we are not racist?).

It is uplifting that she has the courage to say things in public, to get it out there and have it published especially when this easily makes her a target for those who do not agree with her views or just simply because of who her father is.
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