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A chip off the old block PDF Print
Tuesday, 26 February 2008 13:45

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We were on a family outing once and my father pointed to a JKR lorry and asked whether I knew what 'JKR' means. “Jabatan Kerja Raya,” I replied. My mother went into shock when my father replied, “Jaga Konek Raja.”

NO HOLDS BARRED

Raja Petra Kamarudin

My first lesson in life was probably when I was seven or eight years old. One day I came home from school with a 'new' eraser and my mother asked me where I got it from. She knew she had not bought it for me. I told my mother I found it in school and my mother went ballistic. “You stole it?” she screamed.

I did not steal it, I found it,” I protested. “Someone had dropped it, I don't know who, so I picked it up.”

The next day my mother followed me to school and marched me to the headmistress' office. I was made to hand over the eraser and apologise to the headmistress. The headmistress lectured me and told me that the eraser must belong to someone. So the right thing to do was to hand it to the lost-and-found department so that an announcement could be made and the owner could come and claim it back.

I was so embarrassed that I never dared pick up anything again, never mind how worthless it may have been.

When I was about 11, I got into a fight with three Javanese boys. I was then in the Meru Road Primary School in Klang and that was certainly a Javanese-infested area; even till today I think. One of the boys called me “Raja Melayu celup” because I could not speak Malay properly. Well, I had just transferred there from the 'Mat Salleh' Alice Smith School so what would you expect?

I took a swing at the Javanese boy and landed one on his head. It was not that hard a punch really. I think I hurt my hand more than his head but this happened right in the classroom in full view of the rest of the class so he was not about to let me get away with it.

After school I discovered that someone had let the air out of my bicycle tires. I felt a tap of my shoulder and turned around in time to meet the clenched fist of the Javanese boy. The punch got me right in the face and I hit the ground in a total daze. I had never been punched before and the sensation was quite astonishing. It is actually true when they say you will see stars. I did.

I did not dare pick myself up from the ground until the Javanese boy and his two friends had all walked away. Then, with my face throbbing with pain, one eye puffed up, and my mouth swollen like I had been stung by a bee, I pushed my bicycle to town to pump up the tires again.

By the time I got home I was already almost an hour late and my mother was pacing the floor in anxiety. She was shocked to see my swollen face and I explained what had happened, which was why I was late home from school.

When my father came home from work I expected him to rush to my aid but, surprisingly, he took one look at my face and just said, “Hmph.” He did not follow me to school the following day to complain to the headmaster or to insist that action be taken against the three boys who had assaulted me. The message was quite clear: I was on my own. I got myself into it so I will have to get myself out of it.

From that day on I was very careful about getting into trouble. I knew my father would not help me get out of it so I had to make sure that whatever I did there would always be a back door or escape route in case I needed to beat a hasty retreat. That first 'let down' sort of taught me that I need to strategise and size up the situation. I must assess whether the battle I might be taking on is too big for me to handle. The cavalry is not going to come to my rescue if I screw up.

The lesson I learnt from this is: you are on your own. No one, not even your own father, is going to bail you out.

I was always in love with motorcycles but my father would not buy me one until I had a driving licence. Then he made a deal with me. If I pass my LCE exams with an 'A' he would buy me one. I was already on Murugesu's 'least likely to succeed' list so that was a challenge which I considered impossible to achieve. Anyway, I did get an 'A' and my father, though very surprised and quite suspicious as to how I did it, kept his promise and bought me my first motorcycle, a Yamaha 90cc, which I felt then could go as fast as a jet plane.

I was in form four when I first got into trouble with Murugesu. Those who went to VI in the 1960s would probably remember the headmaster we called 'Black Hitler'. It was quite racial really but then that nickname was given by my 'best friend' Rajadurai. So I suppose there was nothing wrong in calling him that if an Indian boy was the one who gave him that 'title'.

Just to digress a bit, Rajadurai became my best friend after I took 'six cuts' on his behalf. Someone had painted graffiti on the toilet wall and a stool pigeon said that 'Raja did it'. Murugesu thought I was the 'Raja' the informer meant and I was summoned to the headmaster's office. I told Murugesu that I did not do it and he demanded to know who did. It was either rap on Rajadurai or take the cuts myself. I was no stool pigeon so I took the six cuts. I was then given a tin of white paint and made to repaint the entire toilet. From thereon, to avoid any further confusion, we called Rajadurai 'Tengku' and I became 'Pete'. So no one was called 'Raja' any more.

And that was probably my next lesson in life: there is no justice in this world and never expect a fair trial.

One day, Murugesu caught me 'racing' in school and he literally ran after me with cane in hand. (He always walked around holding a cane so that he can swing at us whenever he saw us). Actually, I was not really racing. It is just that I only knew two speeds, full stop or full speed, and all I did was ride at my 'normal' speed.

Anyway, I hid in the toilet while Murugesu searched the whole school compound for me. He also asked the head prefect to lock my bike so that I could not escape. Unfortunately, Murugesu finally found me and he swung his cane on my backside with all his might. The impact was so great, like a golfer swinging his golf club, that the cane broke into two. Not satisfied with being able to give me only one 'cut' when he had intended to give me 'six of the best', he then slapped me on my left ear and I heard all sort of zinging sounds in my head. I wonder if that is why I am slightly deaf in my left ear -- or could it be because of too much disco music?

I was asked to report to the headmaster's office to collect the key to my locked bike. I knew that Murugesu had about a dozen or so canes decorating his room so I decided to give the 'invitation' a miss. I then took a bus home instead, much to my father's surprise who thought I had lost my bike or it had been stolen.

I was scared stiff but had no choice but to explain what had happened. He told me to get in the car and we drove back to school. My father marched to the headmaster's office with me in tow and gave Murugesu a piece of his mind. I must say I was surprised as I had expected him to take Murugesu's side.

I bought my son that motorcycle so it belongs to me,” my father said indignantly. “That is my personal property and it is in my name so you have no right to lock it. Unlock it now or else I am going to sue you for abuse of power and authority and for illegally detaining someone's private property.”

Yes, I was wrong for exceeding the school speed limit. But the punishment I received far exceeded the gravity of the crime. Furthermore, it was unconstitutional for the school to detain my bike. The school rules do not allow for this. And it was not my bike actually but my father's bike since he had paid for it and it was in his name.

I was baffled at what I considered an overreaction by my father. I was, after all, guilty of a crime. It would be many years before I would understand my father's stand on the issue. Just because someone had committed a breach of discipline does not give you the right to do what you like to that person. Punish the criminal by all means but make sure the punishment is legal and befitting the crime. Two wrongs do not make a right and the ends can never justify the means. Furthermore, the constitution must be upheld and just because you are in authority does not give you the right to breach the constitution.

We were on a family outing once and my father pointed to a JKR lorry and asked whether I knew what 'JKR' means. “Jabatan Kerja Raya,” I replied. My mother went into shock when my father replied, “Jaga Konek Raja.”

Hoosh!” my mother shouted and my father just laughed. “But it's true,” my father protested. “JKR will do anything the Sultan commands it to do so it is 'Jaga Konek Raja'.”

The whole conversation was beyond me as I was then still too young to understand 'politics'. Much later in life would I comprehend what the issue was. My father was opposed to what he considered an abuse of authority on the part of the Sultan. He did not like the idea of the rakyat having to pay for the new Istana Alam Shah in Klang, which was of course built by JKR. That was back in 1960 and I was then only ten years old. When the Sultan died just before the Istana could be completed my father uttered, “What did I tell you? You can't use the rakyat's money like that.” Invariably, the Sultan never got to live in his new palace and my father was convinced this was God's punishment for building the palace.

When I came of age when identity cards were compulsory, my mother took me to the IC office in Klang to apply for one. Being born in England meant I was a 'foreigner' so I was issued with a red IC instead of a blue one. A few months later I went to collect my IC and brought it home to show my father. He hit the roof when he saw it was a red IC. I was bundled into the car and we drove to the IC office. My father marched into the officer's room and threw the IC onto the tabled and demanded that they replace it with a blue one.

The poor officer was visibly shaken and tried his best to explain. “But Engku, your son was born in England and has a British birth certificate so he can't get a blue IC. He needs to get his citizenship papers first. Only then can he be issued a blue IC.”

But my father would hear nothing of it. “My son may have been born in England but that was in 1950 and in 1957 Malaya gained independence from Britain. I brought him back to Malaya in 1956, one year before Merdeka. It does not matter where you were born. When we became Merdeka, whoever chooses to remain in this country, even if they were born in another country, is an automatic citizen of this country. So issue him a blue IC and do it now.”

I got my blue IC. But when it was time for a new one to be issued at age 18, the IC office was at a loss as to how to issue me a blue one when I should have instead been given a red one. Anyway, they decided to 'close one eye' and just issue me a blue one without probing further how I got a blue one in the first place.

I always thought that my father had abused his authority by intimidating the IC office into issuing me a blue IC when I should have been given a red one. Later, of course, when I discovered the meaning of the word 'discrimination' and when I discovered that many Indians and Chinese were denied citizenship though they came to this country before Merdeka, I understood what made my father go ballistic. My father should have been a wakil rakyat. Probably then many Indians and Chinese born in this country before 31 August 1957 would not have had so much problems fighting for citizenship.

But my father did not like politics. He in fact despised politicians. And that was why he was amongst those few Malays from his 'batch', the first group of Malays to go to England immediately after the war, who did not choose politics as their career. All his contemporaries like Tunku Abdul Rahman, Tun Razak, Tun Dr Ismail, Tun Ghazali Shafie, Khir Johari, and many more went into politics.

Towards the end, however, my father did show some interest in politics. That was about four years or so before he died and when Parti Gerakan was launched. After shunning politics his entire life, my father suddenly became so excited and spoke at length about the new party of intellectuals which was non-race based and which was about to take the country by storm. It is sad that Gerakan eventually got reduced to just another Chinese party and ended up nowhere near the 'Malaysian' party like my father had hoped. I think that was the first time my father actually came out to vote, though I can't be too sure, but he proudly declared that he voted for Gerakan, the first true-Malaysian party. My father never once spoke about the earlier elections but would go on and on about the 1969 elections -- so I assume that was the first time he voted.

My father died when I was about 22 but he lived long enough to leave an impression on me. Of course I am not perfect; nobody is. Some say I am quite eccentric (gila babi or taufung). But my values are what I have been brought up to believe in. Sure, I am opinionated. I am also very abrasive at times. But once I believe in something I will fight tooth and nail to defend it. And I am what I am because I have been brought up to become so. Nothing can change that.

Comments (73)Add Comment
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written by RockyG, February 26, 2008 14:04:07
Pete, I somehow feel that you will have a lot more to contribute to the country, far beyond what is required of you today. Be prepared to chin up and keep the flag flying for the Rakyat.

We all love Malaysia, and we are not about to give in to the corruption and disease that has swallowed our country. We are all Malaysians in our heart, and nothing will change that. There is simply too much too lose if we give up our fight against the corrupted few that has swayed the minds of many.
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written by Jay Krish, February 26, 2008 14:07:38
Nice one Sir RPK...
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written by Birdbrain, February 26, 2008 14:10:06
Dear Pete, you have spoken for many of us who are not brave enough. Your words has touched many hearts. We respect your decision to stay apolitical.

God bless you and your family and may you continue to write the wrongs.
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written by Mr Smith, February 26, 2008 14:14:45
Your father's thinking was ahead of his times. Little wonder you too are still ahead of UMNO and the Malays in your thinking.
You are a refined oriental gentleman and so was your father. It's remarkable that at that early age your father could see that this country needed a multi racial party.
And now in this age, this country is still wallowing in a cesspool of racial politics.
Grakan went down the drain because it join the BN. Had in remained in the Opposition, it might be ruling the country today. The party had the best brains in the country the country with the best vision for its people. How sad.
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written by confuseus, February 26, 2008 14:16:30
Dear Pet,
You are one true people champion.
Keep hitting the ball where it hits most !!
You are an inspiration to all of us... dan it is no JKR.
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written by Birdbrain, February 26, 2008 14:22:54
The Rakyat is in love with you.

http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=F0jFSQp-Kw8&feature=related

Penang lang, time to vote Gerakan out. Do it for Pete's sake!
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written by cheekhiaw, February 26, 2008 14:23:05
Imperfect but still one helluva chip of a block.

Find us more of such chips, a land can only be better for it.

xxx
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written by erin, February 26, 2008 14:23:49
YOU HAVE DONE A GREAT JOB!
YOUR ECCENTRIC BRINGS US WHERE WE ARE TODAY...

VOTE FOR BARISAN RAKYAT!
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written by Moving Train, February 26, 2008 14:25:24
And nothing should. As you have said, no one is perfect. The set of rules remains the same, though. A principled person does not let his/her country go to the dogs, like many out there. It is not so much having to let go of your principles for the riches of this world, but having them to fight injustices that are abound. Different people do it differently, with different approaches.

But if we can convince enough people that what the people in power are doing now is blatantly against the principles of good governance, we stand a chance.

bn out!
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written by Kuku Burung, February 26, 2008 14:26:51
Dear RPK,
The way we were brought up often determines how we live our lives later. I am convinced that you have a determined father who saw the value of imparting good and sound values to his children. I too had a father who was 100% strict on us being honest and truthful. He would whack us betul-betul if we told a lie or did something unethical. I learned a lot from him about being a person of good values. But I am sadden by our PM who proudly claimed that he came from a God-fearing family, had a father who was has a true Islamic upbringing, behaves, in every way, contradicted to what he claimed.
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written by Cash Money, February 26, 2008 14:30:52
Raja

Thanks for sharing but you don't have to explain and justify yourself.

Please we need more pictures of the Barisan Raykat congregating.

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written by revelation, February 26, 2008 14:31:03
Pete,

u know u don't have to wait like your father. 4 years b4 he died to enter politics. u have all the credentials and if no 1 else can bring the oppositions together, i think u can.
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written by cheekhiaw, February 26, 2008 14:39:30
Hey,

Give the chip a break.

There are many ways to skin a cat, many ways to serve.

This blue chip has his ways.

xxx
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written by SBennit, February 26, 2008 14:46:41
Nice story ROK.......you should have stood as a candidate in this coming election, under the socialist party banner.

Except for 69, Klang was a good place to live in the late 60's and 70's.I was living along Lorong Istana during May 13. We were terrified of those Javanese coming over the hill and chopping us up into pieces.

Anyone remembers "Talk of The Town".
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written by alan cheong, February 26, 2008 14:57:35
Thank you for sharing, Peter.

Would have loved to make your dad's acquaintance - sounds like 'kita sama gang'.
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written by cruzeiro, February 26, 2008 15:17:24
When my father came home from work I expected him to rush to my aid but, surprisingly, he took one look at my face and just said, “Hmph.” He did not follow me to school the following day to complain to the headmaster
...........................

Reminds me of "those days" when parents were REALLY parents ..... these days, they could possibly land up with a fight between the parents over something like this!
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Unfortunately, Murugesu finally found me and he swung his cane on my backside with all his might.
...........

And teachers were real TEACHERS with authority!

==================

"The Calvary is not going to come to my rescue if I screw up." - did you mean to say cavalry or what?
Anyway, it makes sense either way tho' .....

=========================

.......... when Parti Gerakan was launched. After shunning politics his entire life, my father suddenly became so excited and spoke at length about the new party of intellectuals which was non-race based and which was about to take the country by storm. It is sad that Gerakan eventually got reduced to just another Chinese party
....................

Anyone who joins the "band of social-contractors" will have to give up principles of statecraft and nationhood, and be reduced to a bunch of idiotic, kow-towing racists if they want a piece of the pie that fascistic extremists have stolen.
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written by cruzeiro, February 26, 2008 15:21:19
BTW,
this whole story reminds me of one other "Raja" that stayed with me in dorms those days - no daddy came to rescue him either!
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written by Task Force 101, February 26, 2008 15:26:36
Thank you for sharing some of your childhood memories and wisdom that makes you wat you are today.

I cannot help notice that recently you have been quite nostalgic about your childhood and your memories. I must admit that during election times, it does get to you. Much of wat makes us who were are, Raja Petra, Task Force 101 etc is based on our experiences.

Guidance and wisdom dispensed in various methods; some legal, some illegal and some darn right punishable by law but in all cases is smothered with only one word-LOVE.

In this day and age, wisdom and guidance can be found in an EPL mag, CLEO and at the end of an SMS or just ****** it. And we sow what we reap.

I can only hope that we are able to make a change and leave a Malaysia that stands together regardless of color and works towards a Malaysia that all Malaysians can be proud of.

When we see the picture of Earth, a light blue ball in the dark carvens of space, and see a little appendix of Asia called Malaysia, we all can say I helped to change and build a better future for that country.

GO AND VOTE ON 8th March. VOTE FOR A BETTER FUTURE
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written by deunan, February 26, 2008 15:28:06
Gerakan, yes.. I remembered sketchy stories how my father was involved in Gerakan during the 60's-70's. I remembered being told that he was with NAAFI's workers union in Melaka at that time. Looking at it today, I wondered, why he was in Gerakan then, I didn't know what Gerakan was previously. Now I know. It is a shame really.
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written by chin, February 26, 2008 15:43:19
I have the same expectation of Gerakan as your father, after a successful run as an alternative party it joined BN.

I have spoken to a couple of Gerakan reps, and I am impressed by their commitment to the community but I just cannot agree with their politics.

The fact that they are part of the BN means they are part of the hypocrisy that UMNO practices.

How can a proud and successful party like Gerakan reduce itself to become a lap-dog for UMNO. What happened to the intellectuals and their principles?
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written by sickofitall, February 26, 2008 15:49:14
I wouldn't want this to be an a**e kissing endeavour, but YM, you make me proud to have you as a fellow Malaysian. Your father sounds a lot like mine! Gerakan, under the leadership of Keng Yaik and now Tsu Koon is unrecognisable from the one when it was first founded. These days, it is voiceless on issues of national importance. Sad, isn't it?
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written by sonofman0, February 26, 2008 15:51:52
Dear Raja Petra,

I wonder if you have ever heard another version of JKR which went the rounds a few years ago. Whether it was deserving or not, I cannot tell.

JKR : Jangan Kerja Rajin. This was shortened to Jangan Kerja. Finally only "Jangan" (uttered in a commanding way) was left of the three words.
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written by singam, February 26, 2008 15:53:48
Dear RPK,

I disagree with those who suggest that you should get into politics. Politics is a dirty game and those who get involved will often face internal struggles about what is the right thing to do. The greater good is a dicey subject and some margins of choice are razor thin.

We need someone like you outside of the political fray to watch them and keep them in line. Even after BR becomes strong enough that there is a balance of power, without an external voice to keep them honest, politicians can still go wrong.

You are the voice of the rakyat. You have the courage and the conviction to speak up for us and the credibility to grab the attention of those in power.

Please continue to do what you are doing.
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written by malaysianohope, February 26, 2008 15:57:24
Greetings Pete,

Another classical piece with a sprinkle of humour. I sincerely think you should write a book about yourself coz it would be a best seller in no time. I truly enjoy every bit of your musings and wittinest.

Btw if you don't mind me saying.. I think you've got the trait of your father, An honest fellow with a temperament to go with, but that OK given what's you've been through.
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written by Umar Rentaka, February 26, 2008 16:04:36
Mätrvat para-däresu
para-dravyesu lostravat.
ätmavat sarva-bhütesu
yah pasyati sa panditah

A learned man treats all women except his wife as his mother, looks on others’ property as garbage in the street, and treats others as he would treat his own self.
- Canakya Pandita
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written by kclim, February 26, 2008 16:19:13
Dear RPK,

You have the logic of a mat salleh, the wisdom of an asian but most of all the heart of a true malaysian. This land of ours has historically been the melting pot of many races, religions and diverse cultures. We shall be proud to follow your footsteps as a true malaysian much as you have followed those before you, especially your parents.
Thanks for the heart warming article which simply reflects on life itself, righteousness and the assurance of a place under the sun. During the caveman's time it was swinging the wooden club to fight for survival. Then came arrows, swords, guns and lately bombs. I shall exercise my right to exist via the ballot box come saturday 8 march 2008. Hope we malaysians make the small effort to pick up the tiny pen to vote wisely for our very own survival in the 21st century in this magnificent land of ours.
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written by Birdbrain, February 26, 2008 16:26:47
A dedication for your fight for justice.

http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=Vgi9HyL9YB8

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written by Debbie, February 26, 2008 16:46:02
My grandfather used to be a headmaster there..long time ago and faraway..Mr Eric Logan Magness..and then mum ..Dorothy Marie Magness used to teach there before becoming the first Tengku Bendahara Azman principle in pandamaran.
I love this story Pete..keep it coming.....The J K R word put a smile on my face today, although I am miles away..it brought back memories.
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written by raven1958, February 26, 2008 16:46:09
Doesnt it rile you Pete....that the streets that once your father and you walked on at Klang ....is ruled by a Malacca born crook called Zakaria Deros.......
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written by hiro, February 26, 2008 16:55:20
It's a truly inspiring story Pete. For some strange reason, I penned this alternative scenario after March 8 2008. You are featured towards the ending paragraphs smilies/smiley.gif

http://hiroblog2007.********.com/
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written by Sagaladoola, February 26, 2008 17:05:15
HIGHLIGHT:
Towards the end, however, my father did show some interest in politics. That was about four years or so before he died and when Parti Gerakan was launched. After shunning politics his entire life, my father suddenly became so excited and spoke at length about the new party of intellectuals which was non-race based and which was about to take the country by storm. It is sad that Gerakan eventually got reduced to just another Chinese party and ended up nowhere near the 'Malaysian' party like my father had hoped. I think that was the first time my father actually came out to vote, though I can't be too sure, but he proudly declared that he voted for Gerakan, the first true-Malaysian party. My father never once spoke about the earlier elections but would go on and on about the 1969 elections -- so I assume that was the first time he voted.

COMMENT:
Kinda nostalgic. Sad isn't it? I think the problem is with the Malaysians themselves. It is because we cannot see beyond race and religion, that is why no matter how many new parties formed with similar intentions will more or less end up the same. However, having a hope is better than having none. At least, we start from somewhere and work from it (I am not talking about Gerakan as the place to start.. ok?).

Hope Barisan Rakyat will bring something different.

Regards,
http://sagaladoola.********.com
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written by teo siew chin, February 26, 2008 17:13:30
Ah Ha! All that whacking & punching & whipping did a whole lotta good for the lil rascal I'd say - it made him the man he is now! smilies/grin.gif.

Maybe what's required nowadays are more Murugesu-s in school. oops sorry, the kids'll scream child-abuse. It kinda makes me wonder, where are those chaps who were subjected to the same schooling and parenting as YM RPK ? hmmmmm is YM RPK writing about them now?

YM RPK need not enter politics cos he's found his niche, his forte - MT !!!
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written by lynn, February 26, 2008 17:48:03
Thanks for sharing & thanks for giving us MT - you are a very fine man with good breeding & if you shld politics, it will be show-time for us all! Wish you could be ACA chief or Chief of Police in the new government! Wah-lau, it will be fun to see you kick some asses..
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written by temenggong, February 26, 2008 17:52:27
We voted Gerakan in 1969 with a good mandate to serve as an opposition party, but they betrayed us and joined BN in1972! Today their greed for Chief Minister post in Penang state has made them lose the big picture, lose Malaysia. Time to kick them out!

It is only DAP ad Pas that has consistently maintained the oppostion for over 45 years.

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written by Incantations, February 26, 2008 17:55:42
I was then in the Meru Road Primary School in Klang
_______________________________________________________ __

Hehehe...Its now known as SK Jln Meru Klang, and yes, I had a lots of Javanese friends from Meru when I was there closed to 30 yrs ago.
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written by Incantations, February 26, 2008 18:00:30
Anyone remembers "Talk of The Town".
____________________________________________________

hey...hey....thats used to be my dad's favourite drinking hole, loved it then because of the free ice-cream that I used to get.

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written by Kritz, February 26, 2008 18:36:38
An enlightening piece Pete! Make me remember my glorious days in school!
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written by chin, February 26, 2008 19:01:26
Dear RPK,

I disagree with Singam's suggestion that you do not enter politics.

While MT has kept us informed, there is a greater need to act. You have given voice to a lot of what ills Malaysia but what about the cure.

Barisan Rakyat will need more creditable leaders and I believe you will make a great one. I will support you personally if you plan to run in the next election.


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written by teo siew chin, February 26, 2008 19:49:03
Dear Yang Mulia Raja Petra

Sorry to nitpick but it's been bugging me so i gotta get it off my chest - shouldn't it be "A chip off the old block"?

btw the article is a funnier read the second time round! i like that Murugesu guy and his cane collection.
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written by Dreamlander, February 26, 2008 19:59:55
RPK,
My uncle just finished reading this blog. He is overwhelmed. His eyes are glistering.
Anyway, he remarked that your dad should have asked Murugesu to send him home in that blue Mercedes.
Did you get "the sixes" on Monday morning during the school assembly or in the HM office ?
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written by Motherchell, February 26, 2008 20:06:51
""""""But my values are what I have been brought up to believe in. Sure, I am opinionated. I am also very abrasive at times. But once I believe in something I will fight tooth and nail to defend it. And I am what I am because I have been brought up to become so. Nothing can change that."""""

Very proud to know you are there for this country Pete, you may not realize the contribution in your own way for this country. But it instills laudable portions of humanity , justice to remember undone,into each one of its citizens.

Your father has every reason to smile and feel proud of you in every little way from his blessed and hallowed abode. MT may be called Malaysia Today -- but i would surmise it as the Malaysia "TRUST".
I admire your Indomitable Will to speak the truth, when you see wrong.

I wonder if a page from your life has ever mattered in parallel to the "EVIL ONES" who sit up there shamelessly , in pretense !!!!!!!!!!You conquered fear , hatred, and evil.
No forces can ever negate you Pete! Your truly a Humble Soul. Bless You Petra and your generations to come!
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written by harrbm, February 26, 2008 20:36:19

hmmm... Klang town...

Talk of the Town... Klang Club...
Those were days...
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written by core1, February 26, 2008 20:44:15
RPK, I was a student in VI in the 90s, the discipline teachers still bring a cane wherever they go, and I even got whacked once with a very thick teacher's book on my back till I almost fell down on the ground

however I think, compared to your years, the teachers & prefects are easily mocked by students & theres not much no fear now. The HM & penolong kanan are widely known to be corrupted by students, the rot never stops

anyway, I enjoy ur writings & keep it up =)
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written by turun padang, February 26, 2008 21:00:10
PEOPLE!!!!

I have been trying to ask all of you to go to the nearest operations ctr to help out & see what is actually in progress but No..

All of you here keep talking to the people who already non BN Supporter.

What's the point of keep talking to believer..WE have to convince the HARD CORE BN SUPPORTER AND IF WE REALLY WANNA SEE CHANGE IN THE COUNTRY, IT START FROM YOU!!!

DO you guys know, all effort has been done by BA & BR especially PAS
go to the nearest PAS , KEADILAN or DAP ctr to see for yourself & get those metarials & start distrubiting to your friends, neighbours, relatives & even strangers..

Go help get the message across!!!! SPREAD THE NEWS!! & ENLIGHTEN THE REST OF MALAYSIAN

Stop sitting infront of your computer & act like you have done enough!!!


And for those of you who really wanna help out.. here's the link to get your kempen materials..

http://www.bahankempen.com/

AND DO YOU KNOW WHO PREPARE ALL THIS MATERIALS? Its people from BA, especially PAS!!!

AND PEOPLE OF DAP, IF YOU CAN PLEASE LINK YOUR CAMPAIGN MATERIALS TO THERE TOO!
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written by turun padang, February 26, 2008 21:00:43
And Pete...

Be Yet Wiser!!!
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written by Angela Ooi, February 26, 2008 21:34:02
Dear Raja Petra, your dad is one whom I would call 'a towering Malaysian'. He had a great sense of decency and honesty and has loved you enough to instill these in you. What a great guy!
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written by NancyL, February 26, 2008 21:55:36
Dear RPK,
You are very lucky to have such great parents with such great values. Nice story.
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written by wiltda13, February 26, 2008 22:45:51
and that was certainly a Javanese-INFESTED area; even till today I think.
--------
Hey!!! By the way, you're right! Ha Ha.

Your father reminds me of my parents, which still lingering around nowadays, Thank God.

No wonder I've been so naughty. Till today.
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written by red door, February 27, 2008 02:14:55
TDM mengaku kezaliman terhadap DSAI.... interesting:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QCO7Cm4qeL4




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written by renoir, February 27, 2008 03:29:05
RPK:
What happens during childhood often stays with us for the rest of our lives, which is why adults should be careful how they behave in front of children.

I can recall two incidents somewhat similar to yours, and both have been traumatic: the first occurred when I was blamed for something I didn't do, and the second when someone I admired did something that was, to me, totally inhuman.

I was in standard two (if I remember rightly) when I was given - publicly - three "cuts" for dirtying the newly-painted classroom wall. I didn't do it, and knew who did it, but refused to rat on my friend. Much later, when I became a teacher, I was very wary of corporal punishment, fearing that I might commit the same sin of punishing the wrong person. It took me over 55 years to forgive that person who caned me so unjustly, who by then had rotted in the grave.

The second event concerned a headmaster who, as in your narrative, was called a "Hitler," partly because of his German heritage (he was from Chicago). I was not involved, but what I saw haunted me for decades.

During the early 50s, people were generally poor, and it wasn't surprising that hawkers would try to earn some money by selling their food outside the mission school. Unlike the "tuckshop" or school cafetaria, hawker food was generally more tasty, though also slightly more expensive. A big plate of cuttlefish with sotong (yau yee oongchoy)cost 20 cents. Throw in another 5 cents for a nice iced hung tao shid (red bean with ice), and you've a great lunch. Not all, however, could afford a 25-cent lunch, so they might be satisfied with a 3-cent pack of kacang putih (fried peanuts) and a 5-cent drink.

Now, the popularity of outside food clearly ate into the profits of the school tuckshop. But the school wouldn't say this: instead, we were told that outside food was unhygienic and we should not patronize the hawkers. Naturally, some of us disobeyed, so "Hitler" began to warn the hawkers not to sell outside the school gates. Most hawkers complied, at least for some time, but inevitably some would return for the lucrative business.

Then one afternoon, as I was walking outside the school gate, I saw Hitler overturned the Indian hawker's wooden box (a squarish, flat box, like a painter's, with compartments for different kinds of fried beans and peanuts). The ground was sandy, so it was impossible for the hawker to retrieve what must have been his daily means of subsistence.

Christ taught us to love our enemies, yet this was a Reverend who behaved so inhumanely to a poor hawker. For years I tried to come to grips with what I saw, and considered the possibility that it was an accident, that perhaps the headmaster had, in anger, waved his arms and it caught the box and overturned it. But even then, he shouldn't have just walked away without compensating the man.

There's a book by Kushner that explained why bad things happen to good people. My problem was, I think, more to the point - why good people do bad things. For decades, in my discussions with local Christians, I could never get a satisfactory answer - they were either apologists for the Reverend or came up with idiotic stuff such as "the ways of the Lord are unfathomable."

My final conclusion, arrived when I was past middle age, was that, much as I tried to deny it - the Reverend was a sinner, and that the local chaps who defended him were nothing but sycophants. Surprisingly, it was after accepting that even a Reverend could be a sinner that I finally forgave the person who caned me that morning during the early 50s, when I was in standard 2.
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written by Ken Wong, February 27, 2008 09:36:32
Pete, The life we have gone through during our childhood often is what makes us who we are today. I really enjoy reading all your articles and I am in full support to the common struggle by the Rakyat for a fairer Malaysia for all races. Kudos to your effort and keep up the good work!
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written by teo siew chin, February 27, 2008 10:43:31
Dear Renoir

Your piece made me shed tears of sadness as compared to RPK's which made me shed tears of laughter. hmmmm both alike yet so different. I'd like one to be my teacher/sifu/guru and the other to lead a rebellion, so Renoir - gather your army and go whack the bad guys and whack em good!!!! smilies/grin.gif
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written by sydput, February 27, 2008 11:24:04
Just like Pete's father, my father was not interested in politics until parti negara was formed. he participated in the elections and lost.Maybe there is no future for multiracialism in this country.
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written by megahyper, February 27, 2008 11:27:51
Pete,RPK, or whatever that stands for.

Internet is a wide medium. in fact its a world wide web. Where is does this article come from? I dont even know who really write this article or what RPK or PRK stand for. In fact I agree with RPK as well! RPK = Raja Pakai Kuning!

Those walk the corridors of power never fail to use one tool - intimidation.

intimidation? Zul Rafique and Azim Zabidi maybe got the wrong guy. (2 meaning)
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written by jivan, February 27, 2008 13:20:14
Hi all,
I really feel sad for this country. Those who walk the corridors of power are all corrupted and abusing their power. Poor rakyat are suffering. God, please save Malaysia.
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written by cwwong, February 27, 2008 13:29:37
Friend to all will befriend no one. That is the lesson to be learn from our broad-minded Dato' Onn Jaafar time when he formed IMP (Independence of Malayan Parti). His vision is too far for it's time. Even now most Malaysian still do not share his vision. A party based on ideology instead of race will forever be a vision. That's how shallow Malaysian mindset are.
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written by Visinic, February 27, 2008 13:33:35
nice piece pete.....
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written by sampalee, February 27, 2008 13:50:35
I too was caned by the black hitler,when he became the first malaysian headmaster of our school[TMS K.Pilah].Another common battle scar.
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written by renoir, February 27, 2008 17:52:41
I wrote:
>A big plate of cuttlefish with sotong (yau yee oongchoy)cost 20 cents]]

Should be, of course, "cuttlefish with kangkong...."
--------------------------------------------------------

teo siew chin wrote:
>hmmmm both alike yet so different.]]

Sadly, it's as you say.

>gather your army and go whack the bad guys and whack em good]]

Am getting my former students, rich or poor, to vote their conscience. At my age, the weapon now is the pen, or keyboard. You can do that too, Teo.
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written by pengembara, February 27, 2008 20:26:40
Sir Pete

"Meru Road Primary School in Klang" in the 60's. Hmm looks like you are a few years ahead of me there. I remember Mr Ponnudurai, the HM. Small man but he could lift a kid up in the air single-handed.

Yes .. Talk of the Town, et all. Tea-dances .. hmmm isn't it better times then? At least less racialism and religious demarcations.

By the way I am still in contact with my classmates of different races from Meru Road Primary School.

Love to all ...
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written by mendela, February 27, 2008 20:35:07
Watch this,

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=taVW8Kv2HcQ
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written by panca, February 28, 2008 00:17:24
YM RPK, if your Dad had joined politics then, perhaps people like my neighbour could have been given a blue ID instead of still having a red one despite being born here in Malaysia, with kids as old 40-year old.

Yet we see many new foreigners who are not too long here riding bikes, obtaining blue ID! Is it not outrageous!
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written by Birdbrain, February 28, 2008 09:58:10
IDENTITY CRISIS

It was clear that during the 50th Merdeka celebrations there was uncertainty and frustration among the people because they were unsure of their identity. Some were bumiputras, while others were non-bumiputras, Some were called ketuanan Melayu but others were not. They thought they were Bangsa Malaysia (Malaysian), but now they were told by UMNO that they do not accept Bangsa Malaysia.

The Federal Constitution clearly states that there is only one category of citizens. There is no mention of bumiputras or ketuanan melayu, which are actually inventions of UMNO.

Prime Minister in 2004 promised that all citizens in Malaysia are treated equally. He has not reinstated the Bangsa Malaysia status for all citizens.

By Dr.Chen Man Hin ( same school of thoughts as Pete's dad?!)
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written by gotsms, February 28, 2008 17:01:39
Tun Mahathir Admitted Victimizing Anwar Ibrahim in 1998!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPKrsCqznS0
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written by doggone, February 29, 2008 06:18:33
Ah..'Taufung' is something I can relate with.

I guess most of us here harbours a healthy dose of that 'wind' to be pissed off with what is happening to our country and willing to show those discontentment through peaceful demos and unadulterated comments.

Lucky those 'fung' is in our head and not our asses. We already have a large dose of that in putrajaya to foul up the whole of South East Asia.

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written by teo siew chin, February 29, 2008 10:13:26
Dear Renoir

errr why you carry on like RPK about age ah? trying for sympathy votes ah? smilies/cheesy.gif .
knowledge, experience, skill ... whatever that's relevant which is acquired as time goes by is what is more important lah.
heck, you're blogging so you're kinda up todate.
and i learn a lot from your postings too!
so, do play nice and share your experiences with us so's we get to avoid the pitholes, the sinkholes as we journey down the path you've already been through.
we enjoy RPK's reminiscences just as we'd enjoy yours too!
and if RPK whack us, you can comfort us smilies/wink.gif
(psssst RPK should be the Rebel and you the Yoda hehehehe)
"teem, shuin, fu, lat" - share with us! (sorry, ashame to declare i dunno proper chinese.)
cheers!
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written by Vig, February 29, 2008 12:28:00
Loved this article.
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written by mikefonz, February 29, 2008 13:14:33
Dear RPK. While reading about your days when you were in school, I recalled mine and I laughed. Coz I think we had some similar erxperiences in the good old school days. I was in BB, a methodist boys school in PJ. Yup, I too got whacked for some silly things which I did and not understand as sometimes my punishment did not befit the crime. The HM will just love to rotan me. But I grew up to be a better person and alot smarter too. Hahaa ... wish we were back like the 60s-80's period.
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written by renoir, February 29, 2008 15:00:29
teo siew chin wrote:
> why you carry on like RPK about age ah?]]

Hahaha! No, teo, it's because the idea of mortality hangs heavy on my mind - I've certain disabilities which I've hinted in the past but don't wish to go over them now. A friend shared your opinion and told me not to worry, that I could still do a lot of things. The problem is that much of my life has been focussed on the physical - I was a sports coach and an above average player in a number of games (today I remain a paid consultant for a certain club). So if you used to do 100 chin-ups with a 20-pound dumbbell strapped on your neck, and today you couldn't even lift five pounds with your hand, then you would know the sense of dread. Acceptance is the key, I guess, and it allows me to see the world in a broader perspective. Just some years ago, I used to hate certain political parties. Today, I no longer do. But I do wish for a better nation, so I write.

I'm glad you found my jottings edifying, just as I found yours and that of others here stimulating and hopeful. Age provides wisdom, but youth often blurts out truth. Let our different characteristics complement one another here.
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written by teo siew chin, February 29, 2008 17:18:08
Dear Renoir

I've always looked out for your comments when you used to sign in as "LChuah" - your aged wisdom is far more profound than that of some of our aged ministers. i'd say they could learn a thing or two from you - you should be kinda like a 'peoples-coach'.
In the www.com world it don't matter whether we have physical limits so just let the keys on your PC fly!!!
Happy blogging!
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written by MasterYoda, March 14, 2008 01:45:23
May the Rakyat be with you!
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