I got this from a friend of mine and I believe (personally) this is something that many foreigners (non-malaysian) may not know about…
What the Chinese want
Sun, 02 May 2010 10:10
By Kee Thuan Chye
COMMENT Every time the Barisan Nasional gets less than the expected support from Chinese voters at an election, the question invariably pops up among the petty-minded: Why are the Chinese ungrateful?
So now, after the Hulu Selangor by-election, it’s not surprising to read in Utusan Malaysia a piece that asks: “Orang Cina Malaysia, apa
lagi yang anda mahu?” (Chinese of Malaysia, what more do you want?)
Normally, something intentionally provocative and propagandistic as
this doesn’t deserve to be honoured with a reply. But even though I’m
fed up of such disruptive and ethnocentric polemics, this time I feel
obliged to reply – partly because the article has also been published,
in an English translation, in the Straits Times of Singapore.
I wish to emphasise here that I am replying not as a Chinese Malaysian
but, simply, as a Malaysian.
Let me say at the outset that the Chinese have got nothing more than
what any citizen should get. So to ask “what more” it is they want, is
misguided. A correct question would be “What do the Chinese want?”
All our lives, we Chinese have held to the belief that no one owes us
a living. We have to work for it. Most of us have got where we are by
the sweat of our brow, not by handouts or the policies of the
government.
We have come to expect nothing – not awards, not accolades, not gifts
from official sources. (Let’s not lump in Datukships, that’s a
different ball game.) We know that no Chinese who writes in the
Chinese language will ever be bestowed the title of Sasterawan Negara,
unlike in Singapore where the literatures of all the main language
streams are recognised and honoured with the Cultural Medallion, etc.
We have learned we can’t expect the government to grant us
scholarships. Some will get those, but countless others won’t. We’ve
learned to live with that and to work extra hard in order to support
our children to attain higher education – because education is very
important to us. We experience a lot of daily pressure to achieve
that. Unfortunately, not many non-Chinese realise or understand that.
In fact, many Chinese had no choice but to emigrate for the sake of
their children’s further education. Or to accept scholarships from
abroad, many from Singapore, which has inevitably led to a brain
drain.
The writer of the Utusan article says the Chinese “account for most of
the students” enrolled in “the best private colleges in Malaysia”.
Even so, the Chinese still have to pay a lot of money to have their
children study in these colleges. And to earn that money, the parents
have to work very hard. The money does not fall from the sky.
The writer goes on to add: “The Malays can gain admission into only
government-owned colleges of ordinary reputation.” That is utter
nonsense. Some of these colleges are meant for the cream of the Malay
crop of students and are endowed with the best facilities. They are
given elite treatment.
The writer also fails to acknowledge that the Chinese are barred from
being admitted to some of these colleges. As a result, the Chinese are
forced to pay more money to go to private colleges. Furthermore, the
Malays are also welcome to enrol in the private colleges, and many of
them do. It’s, after all, a free enterprise.
Plain and simple reason
The writer claims that the Chinese live “in the lap of luxury” and
lead lives that are “more than ordinary” whereas the Malays in
Singapore, their minority-race counterparts there, lead “ordinary
lives”. Such sweeping statements sound inane especially when they are
not backed up by definitions of “lap of luxury” and “ordinary lives”.
They sound hysterical, if not hilarious as well, when they are not
backed up by evidence. It’s surprising that a national daily like
Utusan Malaysia would publish something as idiosyncratic as that. And
the Straits Times too.
The writer quotes from a survey that said eight of the 10 richest
people in Malaysia are Chinese. Well, if these people are where they
are, it must have also come from hard work and prudent business sense.
Is that something to be faulted?
If the writer had said that some of them achieved greater wealth
through being given crony privileges and lucrative contracts by the
government, there might be a point, but even then, it would still take
hard work and business acumen to secure success. Certainly, Syed
Mokhtar Al-Bukhary, who is one of the 10, would take exception if it
were said that he has not worked hard and lacks business savvy.
Most important, it should be noted that the eight Chinese tycoons
mentioned in the survey represent but a minuscule percentage of the
wider Chinese Malaysian population. To extrapolate that because eight
Chinese are filthy rich, the rest of the Chinese must therefore live
in the lap of luxury and lead more than ordinary lives would be a
mockery of the truth. The writer has obviously not met the vast
numbers of very poor Chinese.
The crux of the writer’s article is that the Chinese are not grateful
to the government by not voting for Barisan Nasional at the Hulu
Selangor by-election. But this demonstrates the thinking of either a
simple mind or a closed one.
Why did the Chinese by and large not vote for BN? Because it’s
corrupt. Plain and simple. Let’s call a spade a spade. And BN showed
how corrupt it was during the campaign by throwing bribes to the
electorate, including promising RM3 million to the Chinese school in
Rasa.
The Chinese were not alone in seeing this corruption. The figures are
unofficial but one could assume that at least 40 per cent of Malays
and 45 per cent of Indians who voted against BN in that by-election
also had their eyes open.
So, what’s wrong with not supporting a government that is corrupt? If
the government is corrupt, do we continue to support it?
To answer the question then, what do the Chinese want? They want a
government that is not corrupt; that can govern well and proves to
have done so; that tells the truth rather than lies; that follows the
rule of law; that upholds rather than abuses the country’s sacred
institutions. BN does not fit that description, so the Chinese don’t
vote for it. This is not what only the Chinese want. It is something
every sensible Malaysian, regardless of race, wants. Is that something
that is too difficult to understand?
Some people think that the government is to be equated with the
country, and therefore if someone does not support the government,
they are being disloyal to the country. This is a complete fallacy. BN
is not Malaysia. It is merely a political coalition that is the
government of the day. Rejecting BN is not rejecting the country.
A sense of belonging
Let’s be clear about this important distinction. In America, the
people sometimes vote for the Democrats and sometimes for the
Republicans. Voting against the one that is in government at the time
is not considered disloyalty to the country.
By the same token, voting against Umno is also voting against a party,
not against a race. And if the Chinese or whoever criticise Umno, they
are criticising the party; they are not criticising Malays. It just
happens that Umno’s leaders are Malay.
It is time all Malaysians realised this so that we can once and for
all dispel the confusion. Let us no more confuse country with
government. We can love our country and at the same time hate the
government. It is perfectly all right.
I should add here what the Chinese don’t want. We don’t want to be
insulted, to be called pendatang, or told to be grateful for our
citizenship. We have been loyal citizens; we duly and dutifully pay
taxes; we respect the country’s constitution and its institutions. Our
forefathers came to this country generations ago and helped it to
prosper. We are continuing to contribute to the country’s growth and
development.
Would anyone like to be disparaged, made to feel unwelcome, unwanted?
For the benefit of the writer of the Utusan article, what MCA
president Chua Soi Lek means when he says the MCA needs to be more
vocal is that it needs to speak up whenever the Chinese community is
disparaged. For too long, the MCA has not spoken up strongly enough
when Umno politicians and associates like Ahmad Ismail, Nasir Safar,
Ahmad Noh and others before them insulted the Chinese and made them
feel like they don’t belong. That’s why the Chinese have largely
rejected the MCA.
You see, the Chinese, like all human beings, want self-respect. And a
sense of belonging in this country they call home. That is all the
Chinese want, and have always wanted. Nothing more.
The Utusan Malaysia article:
Orang Cina Malaysia, apa lagi yang anda mahu?