Myth of Language leading to so-called National Unity
By Stephen Ng
In a recent forum,
“'Malaysia: A New Dawn', former
Minister of International Trade and Industries, Tan Sri Rafidah Aziz commented
about Education Minister, Dr Maszlee Malik’s slogan ‘Mempertabatkan Bahasa
Malaysia’.
I would like to add
to her rhetoric. To me, promoting Bahasa Malaysia to strengthen national unity
is nothing but a myth.
This slogan, based
on Shih Huang Ti’s efforts to unite the many kingdoms into one country using
Mandarin as the official language has been sung by Umno propagandists time and
again for many decades.
This narrow
mindedness of people in the likes of Tan Sri Rais Yatim has sidelined English
and other vernacular languages. This has destroyed the country’s
competitiveness in the international arena.
How can Malaysia be
an Asian tiger if its people can hardly speak standard English and communicate
with the rest of the world?
With Bahasa
Malaysia, we can only reach out to people in the so-called Nusantara.
With English and the vernacular languages, we can conquered at least two-thirds of the world, but after all these years of promoting Bahasa Malaysia at the expense of other languages, we have become a kampung within a world of mega cities and metropolitans.
With English and the vernacular languages, we can conquered at least two-thirds of the world, but after all these years of promoting Bahasa Malaysia at the expense of other languages, we have become a kampung within a world of mega cities and metropolitans.
Even China has
caught up with the rest of the world, with its people capable of speaking good
English, compared to our Chinese in Malaysia.
With China fast
becoming an economic powerhouse in this region, Mandarin is an important
communication tool when trading with the Chinese. Mandarin, Tamil and Hindi are
spoken by nearly two billion people or one third of the world’s population.
By all means,
Bahasa Malaysia should be promoted extensively. It is embarrassing to learn
that one can use the “Read Aloud” App on iPhones for example to read aloud text
in Mandarin, but not in Bahasa Malaysia. What is Dewan Bahasa & Pustaka
doing about it when we are supposed to be championing the language?
As pointed out by
Rafidah, our politicians in Malaysia Baru including Maszlee are still singing
the slogan that learning of Bahasa Malaysia will lead to national unity.
Why do I call it a
myth? The answer is simple. Look at the way how Malays voted in the last
general election. Sixty percent of the country’s population voted in three
directions. All speak Bahasa Malaysia and practise the same religion, but where
is the unity?
The Chinese,
Indians, Dayaks and Kadazan Dusun united together with one-third of the Malays
to vote out the old regime, bringing about a new dawn in Malaysia.
We each speak
different languages, yet whenever a ceramah is conducted using the common language,
everyone understood, and a bond was created.
In some ceramah,
politicians spoke in Mandarin and Tamil as well, yet they were able to rally
the different races together to oust Barisan Nasional. If Maszlee is able to
speak in Tamil, I am sure he would have used the language as well to woo the
Indian voters in his constituency.
So, why after the
general election, we see the U-turn, to the point that the Unified Examination
Certificate (UEC) cannot be recognised until Bahasa Malaysia is given the
pre-eminence in these private Chinese schools? This is nothing but an excuse we
have often heard from Umno in the past.
Why are we still
thinking that Bahasa Malaysia alone will unite the nation when this is just a
myth that Umno has believed in for so many decades?
I suggest that if
you have time, go and watch a famous sitcom in the seventies, “Empat Sekawan.”
Tan Ah Chek spoke in Hokkien, while Wong Ho and Hon Yin spoke in Cantonese. Lai
Meng spoke in Hakka, although her mother tongue was Cantonese.
All four of them
understood each other despite using different dialects. In real life, they
were, in fact, good friends.
What united them
together since their days in Bukit Bintang was not the language but the fact
that they were fellow Malaysians with a common direction in life.
Malaysians have
proven that with race, religion and language set aside, we were able to unite
in the last general election.
Can’t we unite
ourselves with a common vision to bring Malaysia to the next level, putting
aside our differences in race, religion and language, that otherwise would divide
us?
I hope after
reading my article, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad would advise his cabinet to make a
paradigm shift if we want to see Malaysia become an Asian Tiger again.
We have what it
takes to trade with the rest of the world using the language our trading
partners are most comfortable with. Let us not lose our diversity.
There is unity in
diversity. Commonness only leads to Communism.
STEPHEN NG is an ordinary citizen with an avid
interest in following political developments in the country since 2008. After
May 9, 2018, he is now involved in contributing ideas towards rebuilding of the
nation.
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