by Navinn Rajendran
I am a Malaysian Indian. Yes.
Malaysian first, Indian second. I kind of don’t know how ill survive in India
if Malaysian Indians are forced to go back but somehow nothing is like
Malaysia. The best decision that my grandparents made in their life was to stay
put in Malaysia. Wait a minute. What you mean by stay put? Didn’t the British
bring Indians to Malaysia. Errrmm. Lets look into some history before we fast
forward to the present situation. Indians have been trading in Malaiyur, which
is The Land of Hills way before British came by. The British kind of needed
some help in plantation as they were lazy to do it themselves and brought our
grandparents to Malaya. When they decided one fine day that they have scraped
enough, they decided to leave.
But Indians weren’t as significant compared to
916 or precious gems to loot back. So an easy way out was to establish a united
country that is peaceful among various races. Of course they left back the
buildings and railroads. Those were just consolation gifts by the way. But
Navinn, why did you say stay put? There was a point of time when the government
gave our grandparent a choice to either give up their citizenship and get their
ass back to India or remain as Malaysians. Many left. Many stayed. If you take
up the property grants in the vital areas across the country, the first owners
would be Chettiars. Who are Chettiars lah dei? They are kind of the good kind
of ahlongs back then. The Indians that stayed did not forcefully stay. But the
trust they had in Malaysia made them stay. For the first time they realised
they could blend in graciously amongst other races, traditions, and believe. The
country had nothing back then except UNITY. I mean Malaysia weren’t poor.
Everyone was interdependent and economically we were taking baby steps. But as
much we were progressing in unison, there were some inclusiveness among its
races. Everyone was united as one in general and at the same time community
progression was a main agenda amongst communities that shared a common
interest. And the only community that overlooked the future in pursuit of
self-sustainability was the Malaysian Indians. A system was not put in place to
allow a smooth transition from estates to towns and cities. Values declined
amongst community leaders as everyone was looking into their personal interest.
It is not wrong. So much of hardship a Malaysian Indian goes through to climb
up the society ladder and he wants to safeguard for the coming generations. But
if only everyone took some initiatives to peek through the common interest, we
would have to be where and how we are now. If only every wrong doings were
questioned, we would have proper channels laid out to seek assistance. We are
so blinded that we don’t really know what is actually important. We have been
throwing our energies in the wrong direction for many years.
Wanting to change
a 20 year old problem in 2 days is atrocious. But we have to change right? We
don’t have a choice. Evolution is so rapid that if we fail to move alongside,
we will be left way back that even the thought to catch up will not be
sufficient. The Malaysian Indian community is in dire state. Period. Our efforts
to uplift the community might be valid but not efficient. The core issues of
the community are just handful and if they are addressed genuinely, changes
will take place. Remember, we are not carrying on a journey that begun way
back. We are starting fresh. Starting from a dot. Its either now or never.
Whatever resources in any way available to the community is a tool to rebuild
the foundation of the community. Do I sound racist? Navinn is talking all about
Indians abut claims to be a Malaysian? Every positive progress an Indian makes
is a progress for Malaysia.
There is nothing other races can do when an Indian
guns down another Malaysian in a broad daylight. Others can only expect the law
to protect them in removing these heartless Indians from the streets. One way
or another. The only reason he decided to carry a gun was because the Indian
community dashed his dreams or even didn’t show him life is way more beautiful
compared violence. The ones that point to others for their shortcomings failed
to realise that the other fingers are pointing to them. We will rise. We will
fight our battles and contribute back to Malaysia in a rightful way. We will be
significant not just for votes but for common wellbeing and for the Malaysian
Dream.
*I will be writing a series of
rational thoughts that have affected the community.
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