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This End of The Telescope

Derek's view from this end of the telescope.

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

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My eyes tried to take in the visual feast of colours before me; also the real gastronomic feast that awaits me.

The feast that will begin the moment I make the most important decision in my life at that point.

You see, I was around six years-old at that time.

My dad asked me, ” What do you want to eat’? A simple question; but it was one I could not answer.

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I have a few semi-finished articles languishing in my Drafts folder.
A lethal combo of procrastination and busyness is hindering me.
Or perhaps, I am using that as an excuse?

I believe I have commited the cardinal sin of intending to write for my ”readers” rather than for myself.

“Better to write for yourself and have no public than to write for the public and have no self.”
- Cyril Connolly.

But then again . . .

By Adrian Chew  (loyarburok.com)

New and Improved! Buddha now comes in a box. Enlightenment sold separately.

Being_Buddha

I stood there just stupefied.

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By Adrian Chew and Adriana Leu (loyarburok.com)

Malaysia Day

IN THE 47TH YEAR OF OUR COUNTRY’S NATIONHOOD, there is a conversation going on. Passengers on planes, people in offices and coffee shops, students and teachers in schools – Malaysians are starting to have opinions that the rest of us should know about.

Whether it be the businessman who gripes about corruption, the frustration of the political science student who is warned to take no part in politics, the 9As student who is denied a scholarship based on her skin colour, the simple church-goer who is told that he cannot use the name of God in a certain language, the mother who is left empty and broken by the unexplained death of her son in police custody or the inequity felt by generations of Dayak communities cultivating crops on their forefathers’ native customary lands who are denied titles of ownership ? these are but a few of the many voices that make up the conversation.

This Malaysia Day, as our National flag flies proudly on flag poles across the country, it is perhaps timely we pause, listen and reflect on these voices of those amongst us who cannot escape feeling that somewhere, somehow we collectively as a nation have gone astray from the path we set out on in 1963.

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Alwyn Lau, http://wyngman.blogspot.com

Amartya Sen in his Theory of Justice brings up a case-study of three children who are all vying for one flute to illustrate the often ambiguous nature of theories of social justice.

Anna says the flute should be hers because she’s the only one who can play it and thus provide pleasure for all. Bob says it he should have it since he’s the poorest of them all and that a good community should allocate their resources to those who have the least. Carla, finally, says she deserves to keep it since she’s the one who made it and who doesn’t deserve the fruit of their own labour?

Who do you think should own the flute? Are we utilitarians, egalitarians or libertarians (or what)? Our response not only reveals our deeply held beliefs (religious, partisan, philosophical, etc.) regarding how to distribute society’s resources but maybe even the contexts within which our societies function. So, again, who would you give the flute to and why?

” Selami dan Jiwailah Melayu dan Islam Yang Sebenar , Jauhilah Melayu dan Islam UMNO dan Perkasa”

Oleh : Shen Yee Aun

Perpaduan tidak dapat dicapai sekirannya kita yang berbangsa bukan Melayu ada prejudis , pemikiran negatif , perasaan takut dan gementar dan salah faham dan pandangan terhadap erti Melayu dan Islam yang sebenar. Kita akan cenderung untuk lebih menjarakkan dan menjauhkan diri daripada mereka.

Jangan sebab nila setitik rosak susu sebelangga. Jangan disebabkan beberapa pemimpin Melayu yang memiliki kepentingan politik dan peribadi sendiri dengan menggunakan nama Melayu dan Islam sebagai alat dan senjata maka kita terus menyalahkan seluruh komuniti Melayu dan Islam.

Keris

Sebelum ini ada seorang pemimpin Melayu menghunus keris ke langit dan mencabar bukan Melayu jangan mencabar mereka. Bukan Melayu kena faham bahawa itu bukan budaya dan adat Melayu. Hakikatnya dalam adat mereka keris tidak boleh dihunus sesuka hati. Keris hanya boleh dihunus apabila mereka dicabar dan bukannya digunakan untuk mencabar. Sebab itu dalam adat Melayu ada pepatah menyatakan biar mati anak jangan mati adat. Namun ada juga sebilangan pemimpin yang lebih rela biar mati adat jangan mati UMNO.

Terdapat juga seorang pemimpin Melayu di Pulau Pinang yang menyatakan Cina adalah pendatang. Tindakan biadap dan kurang ajar ini juga bukan Melayu. Melayu yang sebenar kaya dan budi perkerti dan budi bahasa mereka. Jika benar sekalipun bukan Melayu adalah pendatang maka Melayu yang sebenar dalam budaya dan karya kesusasteraan mereka merupakan satu – satunya bangsa di dunia yang banyak menekankan tentang melayan tetamu mereka dengan baik.

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A letter to a son about Merdeka

FIRST of all, Benjamin, let me say, “Congratulations!” I know you have worked hard over these last three years, endured many challenges and faced many tests. Learning lots of new stuff may be exciting, but I know it is not always easy. So I am proud of you, son, for having graduated today. It may only have been kindergarten, but I know it was a big and meaningful step for you.

Benjamin and big sister Samantha on graduation day

As I watched you and your classmates today, and the kids from all the other kindergartens walk up on stage to receive their certificates, I was reminded that this country of ours, Malaysia, is as much yours as it is mine. God has allowed me and all the other adults in this country a time to take care of it for you. But the day will come when we will have to turn it over to you and your friends.

I hope we won’t have messed up. I pray that we will have the strength and the courage to do the right things, so that we will be able to pass on to you, son, and those of your generation, a country that is successful. Not just rich in the things that we have — the tall buildings, the big houses, the fancy shops. But rich also in our hearts. To share love with one and all, to be kind and decent to others, to be fair and just to everyone, to let anyone who wants to come and live here and do an honest day’s work the right to call this country home.

I looked at you and your friends, boys and girls of different races and religions. You have all played together, learnt together, held hands, scraped knees, cried and laughed together. It is my solemn hope that it will always be this way for you all.

Don’t let anyone force you to believe differently. Watch out for people who will steal your innocence. Yes, you will grow up and find out for yourself one day that things aren’t exactly perfect. But that is no reason to prolong that imperfection.

Learn to work together to make things right, if not perfect. The things that you learnt in kindergarten — to share, to think of other people as well, not to take the best toys or yummiest food just for yourself — remember those lessons. Maybe one day someone will come along and tell you that this country does not belong to you, and that we should go back to “somewhere else”. I can tell you someone in primary school told me that many years ago. Tell them they are wrong.

Great-great grandpa Khoo came from a village in southern China and eventually found work with Chartered Bank in Penang. When Chartered Bank opened a branch in Taiping in the early years of the 1900s, he moved there and that is where great-grandpa Khoo and grandpa Khoo were born. They grew up in this country, and worked all their lives as teachers to educate successive generations of Malayans and Malaysians.

The Sees and the Lims and Changs they married have probably been here much longer. Some of grandma Khoo’s aunties who dressed in sarungs and spoke Malay all the time and lived in a place called Malacca were killed by Japanese soldiers during what is known as World War II. That was when the Japanese ruled Malaya for a while.

All of these people who lived before you contributed in their own way to make this land a better place for their children, and their children’s children, and so on and so forth. When you learnt Negaraku in school, you sang, “Tanah tumpahnya darahku”. Through their blood, sweat and tears, all of these people who lived before you eked out a life and a future, and now that life and that future belongs to you, my son.

You are as Malaysian as any other boy or girl in this country, as are your classmates Iman, Danial, Harith and the rest. Don’t let anybody tell you all differently.

(© Theresa Thompson | Flickr)

In 15 years, you will get what is known as the right to vote, the right to choose the kind of people you want to lead this country. Claim that right and when the time comes, choose wisely.

Think of the kind of future you and your friends want for this country. Would you want a country where there is equal opportunity for all, where no one is intentionally left behind, where those who are less fortunate are helped to their feet, where there is fair play? It will be in your hands. If you want these things, you and your friends will have to work hard to achieve them. It will not be easy, but I know you will not give up easily.

Between then and now, I wish and pray that you will have a wonderful life. There will be lots more tests and exams to study for, lots more homework and lots more graduations. There will be more things to learn, more people to meet, more experiences, more places to visit.

I will always be your father, and I will always love you, in good times and bad. But I know I make mistakes sometimes, so I can be wrong sometimes. I hope you will be understanding when I make mistakes. But strive to be the best that God grants you the grace to be, and honour God always in your life.

Happy graduation, again, my son. And to our country, yours and mine, Happy Merdeka.

***

Andrew Khoo is an advocate and solicitor in private practice, and an aspiring columnist and commentator.

Link: http://www.thenutgraph.com/a-letter-to-a-son-about-merdeka/

The following keynote speech given by former finance minister and Gua Musang parliamentarian Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah at the 4th Annual Malaysian Student Leaders Summit (MSLS) on the 31st of July 2010.

We were once “Malaysians”

***

I have played some small role in the life of this nation, but having been on the wrong side of one or two political fights with the powers-that-be, I am not as close to the young people of this country as I would hope to be.

History and the 8 o’clock news are written by the victors. In recent years, the government’s monopoly of the media has been destroyed by the technology revolution.

You could say I was also a member of the United Kingdom and Eire Council for Malaysian Students (UKEC). Well, I was, except that belonged to the predecessor of the UKEC by more than 50 years, The Malayan Students Union of the UK and Eire. I led this organisation in 1958/59.

I was then a student of Queen’s University at Belfast, as well as at Lincoln’s Inn. In a rather cooler climate than Kota Bharu’s, we campaigned for decolonisation. We demonstrated in Trafalgar Square and even in Paris. We made posters and participated in British elections.

Your invitation to participate in the MSLS was prefaced by an essay that calls for an intellectually informed activism. I congratulate you on this. The Youth of today, you note, “will chart the future of Malaysia.” You say you “no longer want to be ignored and leave the future of our Malaysia at the hands of the current generation.” You “want to grab the bull by the horns… and have a say in where we go as a society and as a nation.”

I feel the same, actually. A lot of Malaysians feel the same. They are tired of being ignored and talked down to.

You are right. The present generation in power has let Malaysia down. But also you cite two things as testimony of the importance of youth and of student activism to this country, the election results of 2008 and “the prime minister’s acknowledgement of the role of youth in the development of the country.”

So perhaps you are a little way yet from thinking for yourselves. The first step in “grabbing the bull by the horns” is not to require the endorsement of the prime minister, or any Minister, for your activism. Politicians are not your parents. They are your servants. You don’t need a government slogan coined by a foreign PR agency to wrap your project in. You just go ahead and do it.

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“After the Nazi defeat the blood of those victims cried out for justice; war crimes trials were an inevitability. But what standard was to be used at Nuremberg to judge the accused leaders of the Nazi regime? When the Charter of The Tribunal, which had been drawn up by the victors, was used by the prosecution, the defendants ( Nazis ) very logically complained that they were being tried under ex post facto laws ( definition here ); and some authorities in the field of international law have severely criticized the allied judges on the same ground.

The most telling defense offered by the accused was that they had simply followed orders or made decisions within the framework of their own legal system, in COMPLETE consistency with it, and that they therefore could NOT rightly be CONDEMNED because they deviated from the alien value system of their conquerors.

Faced with this argument, Robert H. Jackson, Chief Counsel for the United States at the trials, was compelled to appeal to permanent values, to moral standards transcending the lifestyles of particular societies – in a word, to a ‘law above the law’ of individual nations. “

Excerpt from ‘Law ABove The Law’ by J.W. Montgomery

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