Tag: Malay community

  • Bagi Leftenan Alfian Aman, Biasiswa SAF Bantu Beliau Lakar Kerjaya Dalam Bidang Dasar Awam

    Bagi Leftenan Alfian Aman, Biasiswa SAF Bantu Beliau Lakar Kerjaya Dalam Bidang Dasar Awam

    Bagi Leftenan Muhammad Alfian Aman, Biasiswa Merit Angkatan Bersenjata Singapura (SAF) membantunya meringankan beban kewangan keluarganya.

    Bapanya, yang merupakan satu-satunya pencari nafkah dalam keluarganya, didiagnosis dengan barah usus beberapa tahun yang lalu, dan bil perubatannya semakin menggunung.

    “Kadang kala, bil-bil perubatannya agak mahal, namun kami berupaya mengusahakannya.” kata LTA Alfian, 20 tahun dengan tabah.

    “Dengan biasiswa ini, ia membantu membiayai pengajian saya, ia benar-benar meringankan beban kewangan ibu bapa saya.”

    Beliau akan melanjutkan pengajiannya ke sarjana muda dalam bidang pentadbiran perniagaan dan kemudian sarjana dasar awam di Universiti Nasional Singapura (NUS).

    Di Istana semalam, LTA Alfian merupakan antara 15 penerima Biasiswa Merit SAF di majlis penyampaian Anugerah Biasiswa Pertahanan yang diberikan buat julung-julung kalinya.

    Beliau percaya dengan mempelajari bidang dasar awam, ia akan menjadi sesuatu yang beliau ingin lakukan pada masa hadapan, iaitu untuk melakar dasar-dasar bagi memperbaiki kehidupan anggota perkhidmatan negara.

    “Satu contoh yang saya fikirkan sekarang ialah bagaimana untuk mempermudahkan proses Ujian Kecekapan Jasmani Individu (IPPT),” katanya.

    Pengalamannya berkhidmat dalam tentera membuatkannya berfikir tentang cara-cara untuk memperbaiki pengalaman komander platun yang dilantik unit 1BMT pada Januari tahun ini, yang merupakan salah satu tugas LTA Alfian untuk mendampingi rekrut-rekrutnya.

    “Salah satu daripada cabaran saya ialah untuk mendampingi setiap rekrut….dan untuk meyakinkan mereka supaya bekerjasama sebagai sebuah platun,” katanya.

    “Maka saya percaya bahawa peluang ini membolehkan saya untuk bertemu dengan mereka yang datang daripada pelbagai latar belakang dan ia juga membolehkan saya untuk mempelajari lebih banyak lagi tentang isu-isu dan membuat perubahan di peringkat asas.”

    Selepas menamatkan pengajiannya kelak, LTA Alfian berminat menjadi seorang pegawai pemerintah dan beliau juga merancang untuk menyertai kursus taktik bagi mempersiapkan diri. Berkhidmat kepada negara mengalir dalam darah saya. “Saya berharap dapat terus berkhidmat dalam bidang tentera sehingga saya bersara kelak,” kata beliau lagi.

     

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Commentary: A Vote For Any Candidate Is A Vote To The PAP And Their Racist Policies

    Commentary: A Vote For Any Candidate Is A Vote To The PAP And Their Racist Policies

    We, the Malay Community, we have our pride and dignity.

    We shall not stoop so Low and fall into the trap of the PAP Government that the Malays need a reserved Presidential Election than only will they stand for election.

    If you vote for any of the candidates in this coming PE, it means you are agreeing to the racist and discriminatory policy of the PAP Government.

    Let’s look at the bigger picture. Malays are better than that. We shall not be manipulated by the Government into thinking that they are actually thinking of us.

    A vote for any of the candidate in the coming PE is a vote to the PAP and their racist policy.

    Spoil your vote!

     

    Source: Abdul Salim Harun

  • Flashback 1988: Definition of Malay Was Debated In Parliament (In The Context Of GRC System)

    Flashback 1988: Definition of Malay Was Debated In Parliament (In The Context Of GRC System)

    The issue on the definition of Malay was debated earlier in Parliament (in the context of the GRC system) back in 1988.

    It was an exchange involving Goh Chok Tong, Chiam See Tong and Ahmad Mattar.

     

    Part of the excerpt read;

    Can a Maori be a “Malay” Member of Parliament? Will the day come when five Europeans enter the Singapore Parliament as “Malay” MPs?

    Opposition MP Chiam See Tong posed these questions to his Select Committee colleagues as he questioned the revised definition of a Malay in the Team MP legislation.

    First Deputy Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong’s reply: Anyone who feels he is part of the Malay community and is accepted by the community as such can be a “Malay” MP.

    “If indeed five Europeans are accepted by members of the Malay community to be members of the community, they will be so put up by the community as candidates, because they are regarded as members of that community,” he said.

    The same goes for even a Maori, said Mr Goh.

     

    In another part;

    If the day came when five or seven such Europeans entered Parliament as “Malay” MPs, he asked, where was the minority representation the GRCs were meant to ensure?

    Dr Mattar told him that Malay candidates must first be cleared by the Malay Community Committee.

    “If the Malay community thinks that it is best represented by the Europeans, so be it. I do not think it will happen,” he said.

    Mr Sidek said that while the revised definition embraced other races, the real objectives was to avoid complaints from groups like the Banjaris or Achenese, who were not included in the original definition.

     

    Also;

    Mr Goh pointed out that the purpose of the GRCs was to ensure Malay representation in Parliament and the definition was crafted to include anyone who believes he is part of the community and is accepted as such by it.

    He said that if Europeans are accepted as members of the Malay community, they are free to stand as “Malay” candidates.

    “If the Malay community is happy, who are we to say they should not represent them? Because they are regarded by the Malay community as members of the Malay community.”

     

    Source: Abdul Rohim Sarip

  • Doubts About Presidential Hopefuls Not Being Malay Enough Are Off Track

    Doubts About Presidential Hopefuls Not Being Malay Enough Are Off Track

    Singapore’s Malay community has long held an expansive view of race, a stand that reflects its confidence.

    The coming presidential election is the first to be reserved for candidates from the Malay community, following changes to the Constitution to ensure the highest office of the land reflects Singapore’s multiracial society.

    Yet there has been some contention on social media over the “Malayness” of would-be candidates, with some asking whether any of the aspirants who have stepped up or are mulling over a bid is “truly Malay”.

    It is as if the very nature of this year’s contest has misdirected energies towards securing the “most authentic” candidate instead of a Malay candidate who would make the best head of state.

    Ironically, all three hopefuls – businessmen Salleh Marican and Farid Khan, and Speaker of Parliament Halimah Yacob – have been acknowledged by the community, peers and the media as prominent Malay individuals.

    They speak Malay, follow Malay customs and are, to some extent, role models for the community in business and public service. Why, then, has the question of whether they are “pure Malays” or “Malay enough” cropped up when it comes to the presidential election?

    Media attention on them may have played a part. Businessman Mohamed Salleh Marican, whose father is Indian, has been criticised for not being fluent in Malay, after his fumbling during a Facebook Live interview conducted outside the Elections Department where he had gone to collect the forms for the elected presidency contest.

    Businessman Mohamed Salleh Marican has been criticised for not being fluent in Malay, after his fumbling during a Facebook Live interview. ST FILE PHOTO

    Marine company chief Farid Khan has been panned for stating openly his Pakistani ethnicity, while declaring that he has always seen himself as a member of the Malay community as he speaks the language, practises the customs and gives back to it.

    Madam Halimah too has been pressed on the issue – past media reports noted her father was Indian – but she considers herself as very much a member of the Malay community, and has contested four general elections as a Malay candidate in a GRC or Group Representation Constituency.

    A number of community leaders and observers say the critics’ obsession with authenticity and purity flies in the face of tradition – it neglects the open, inclusive view of race that many Malays have adopted in welcoming new members to the community, which includes a wide range of admixtures and ethnicities.

    Mr Farid Khan has been panned for stating openly his Pakistani ethnicity, while declaring that he sees himself as a member of the Malay community. ST FILE PHOTO

    What is a Malay?

    Official records since 1824 have classified inhabitants of Singapore into four broad races – Malays, Chinese, Indians and Others. While Chinese and Indians have generally been understood to refer to people with forebears from China and India and migrants from the archipelago who trace their roots to these countries, Malay has included a variety of ethnicities regarded as indigenous to this region: Acehnese, Baweanese, Bugis and Javanese, among others.

    Yet the sense of affinity to a Malay identity was not strong up till the 1930s, when the burgeoning Malay-language press helped promote a nationalism that sought to improve the lot of the Malay community.

    The formation of the United Malays National Organisation in 1946 in Johor Baru – just across the Causeway – focused the minds of many Malays on issues of identity at a time of rapid change. For the first time, Malay would be clearly defined. Because the vast majority of Malays were Muslims and Islam had become closely associated with the Malay identity, the official definition of Malay in the Federation linked race with religion.

    Past media reports on Madam Halimah noted that her father was Indian – but she considers herself very much a member of the Malay community.   BH FILE PHOTO

    Article 160 of the Malaysian Constitution thus defined “Malay” as a person who professes the religion of Islam, habitually speaks the Malay language, conforms to Malay custom – and was before Merdeka Day born in the Federation or in Singapore, or one of whose parents was born in the Federation or in Singapore or living in both places; or is the issue of such a person.

    Article 152 of the Singapore Constitution also made clear the Government’s responsibility to constantly care for the interests of minorities, and referred to the special position of the Malays, “who are the indigenous people of Singapore”, and whose interests and language it had a duty to safeguard and support.

    After Separation, a Constitutional Commission headed by Chief Justice Wee Chong Jin discussed the issue of safeguards for minorities as well as, among others, the definition of Malay. It rejected calls to expand the definition to non-Malay Muslims and have Islam as a marker of Malayness. Instead, it chose not to explicitly define the races, languages or religious minorities in Singapore, in the hopes of a “united, multiracial multicultural society”.

    GRC debates

    However, concern over ensuring enough Malays will be represented in key institutions – Parliament, and more recently, the Presidency – meant there was a need to define who is a Malay in Singapore’s context.

    Thus when the concept of Team MPs – later GRCs – was discussed in the late 1980s, it was inevitable that the debate on what is a Malay should resurface.

    The Government said the idea behind GRCs was to ensure Parliament remained multiracial and to prevent the spectre of a House that might one day be without minorities.

    A Select Committee held hearings involving a wide range of representatives in 1987 and 1988, and many Malay leaders felt strongly about having Islam included in the definition of a Malay.

    The committee took the view that as Singapore is a secular state, it would not be appropriate for the state to spell out that a Malay must also be Muslim to contest in a GRC.

    There was one other issue: a good number of Malays had Indian, Arab or Other on their ICs due to their ethnicity or parentage, even though they had long associated with the Malay community.

    The Select Committee recognised this point. It also accepted a submission that sociologically, self-definition is the only valid way to define an ethnic group. “A person belonging to the Malay community must think of himself as Malay, and must be acceptable to the Malay community,” it said. “Therefore the legislation should not lay down prescriptive criteria as to who does or does not belong to the Malay community, but should define a mechanism to let the community decide for itself.”

    This mechanism has taken the form of a community committee, which the Select Committee report said would be “a safeguard against an unacceptable candidate being wrongly certified as a member of the Malay community”.

    At the same time, the Parliamentary Elections Act – and the latest amendments to Article 19B of the Constitution – define a person belonging to the Malay community as “any person, whether of the Malay race or otherwise, who considers himself to be a member of the Malay community and who is generally accepted as a member of the Malay community by that community”.

    A similar approach has been adopted for aspiring candidates for the presidential election in the latest round of changes to the law.

    Associate Professor Eugene Tan of the Singapore Management University School of Law notes the criteria for running as a minority in a GRC is the same as that for a presidential election.

    And during the debate on changes to the Presidential Elections Act on how race is defined earlier this year, MPs called for a broad, inclusive approach to be adopted.

    Singapore’s Malay community has long held an expansive view of race – and been open to newcomers and others keen to identify with it.

    It is a signal of confidence and courage – and nothing could be further from that than questioning whether someone who identifies as Malay and is accepted as Malay is “pure Malay” or “Malay enough”.

    So long as a person identifies as Malay and is generally accepted as such by the community, his Malayness should not be questioned.

     

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com

  • Telling Stories To Spread The Love Of Malay During Malay Language Month (Bulan Bahasa)

    Telling Stories To Spread The Love Of Malay During Malay Language Month (Bulan Bahasa)

    Author and storyteller Jumaini Ariff’s fondest memories of the Malay language come from her childhood, when she listened to the radio at home.

    “I would sit at the counter while my mother was cooking, and other than speaking to her or annoying her, I would learn things like pantun (rhymes)… how they speak, how they addressed the elderly and… storytelling,” said the 38-year-old.

    With eight Malay-language books published, she sees herself as an educator for her tongue, which is why she jumped at the chance to be one of this year’s three duta bahasa (language ambassadors) for Bulan Bahasa, or the Malay Language Month.

    She has already participated in Bulan Bahasa multiple times.

    During its launch on Sept 9 at the Malay Heritage Centre in Kampong Glam, she will tell stories with live gamelan music accompanying her.

    There will be a series of programmes on 2017’s themes of ilmu (knowledge), budaya (culture) and mesra (relationships), spread out between Aug 15 and Oct 15, and in a mixture of Malay and English for members of the public to enjoy.

    The location of the launch, as well as the focus on culture as one of this year’s themes, means that most of the programmes will be in Malay.

    The festival was launched in 1988 by the Malay Language Council to encourage the use of Malay in the everyday lives of Singapore’s Malay community.

    Said chairman of the Bulan Bahasa 2017 committee, Ms Rahayu Mahzam: “Our legacy, stories and values can survive the test of time only if we make the effort to preserve our appreciation of the Malay language.

    “Our mastery of the language can only enrich our understanding of our Malay identity. It is important to perpetuate this in the younger generation so we can continue to flourish as one community.”

    Ms Rahayu told The Straits Times that the challenge lies in getting people to use Malay in their daily lives and to learn to appreciate the importance of preserving the Malay culture through the language.

    “The celebration of the Malay culture is out there – everybody loves Malay culture and it’s easy to have activities revolving around it, but the appreciation of how language ties in with that is not as strong,” she said, citing the example of silat, the Malay martial art form, and how people may not appreciate the strong links between the cultural value of the weapons and moves and the Malay words for them.

    In light of recent language gaffes, such as the use of a wrong character in the Speak Mandarin Campaign launch and wrongly typed Tamil in some National Day Parade pamphlets, she said that the Malay Language Council has a large network of people which it taps to ensure the correct translation and dissemination of Malay-language material.

    Ms Rahayu, who is a member of the council, said the network is composed of people such as literary experts, teachers and previous Bulan Bahasa language ambassadors.

     

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com