Malaysian
scholar
Saying 'no' to Singapore
But high achiever disillusioned with race policies stops
him going home. To JeffOoi's Screenshots.
May 31, 2005
Dear Mr Ooi,
I have been meaning to pen some thoughts for some time now,
to let people actually read the views of the typical 'overseas
Malaysian' who is kept away.
I realise
that my email is rather long, but I do hope that you would
consider publishing it (and also keep my name private!).
I shall
start by telling a little about my background. Mine is a
rather sad tale - of a young Malaysian full of hope and
patriotic enthusiasm, which is slowly but surely trickling
away.
I am
very different from many other non-bumiputeras, as I was
given tremendous opportunities throughout my childhood.
Born
into a middle-class Chinese but English-speaking family,
I grew up with all the privileges of imported books, computers,
piano/violin lessons and tuition teachers.
My parents
insisted that I should be exposed to a multi-racial education
in a national school.
In my
time, my urban national school (a missionary school) was
a truly happy place - where the Malays, Chinese and Indian
students were roughly equal in proportion.
We played
and laughed with each other, and studied the history of
the world together during Form 4, with one interesting chapter
dedicated to Islamic history.
Though
75% of my teachers were Malays, I never really noticed.
My Malay teachers were the kindest to me - teaching me well
and offering me every possible opportunity to develop.
I led
the district teams for English and Bahasa Malaysia debating
competitions. I was the only non-Malay finalist in the Bahasa
Malaysian state-level elocution competition.
My Malay
teachers encouraged me to transfer to a government residential
school (sekolah berasrama penuh) so as to enable me to maximise
my academic potential.
I refused
because I was happy where I was, so they made me head prefect
and nominated me as a 'Tokoh Pelajar Kebangsaan'. Till this
day, I am absolutely certain that it was the kindness of
all my Malay teachers which made me a true Malaysian.
"No"
to Singapore scholarship
I excelled
at school and was offered a Singaporean government scholarship
to study overseas. I turned them down because I wanted to
ensure that I would remain a 'true Malaysian' in the eyes
of Malaysia.
So I
accepted a Malaysian government scholarship to study at
Oxford University. Throughout my three years as an undergraduate,
the officers at the MSD looked after me very well, and was
always there to offer support.
I graduated
with first class honours, and was offered a job with a leading
investment bank. The JPA released me from my bond, so as
to enable me to develop my potential.
I shall
always be grateful for that. I worked hard and rose in rank.
My employer sent to me to Harvard University for postgraduate
study and I climbed further up their meritocratic ladder.
Now
I am 31 years old and draw a comfortable monthly salary
of US$22,000. Yet, I yearn to return home. I miss my home,
my family, my friends, my Malaysian hawker food and the
life in Malaysia.
Turning
down Singapore job
I have
been asked many times by Singaporean government agencies
to join them on very lucrative terms, but I have always
refused due to my inherent patriotism.
I really
want to return home. I have been told by government-linked
corporations and private companies in Malaysia that at best,
I would
still have to take a 70% pay cut if I return to Malaysia
to work. I am prepared and willing to accept that. My country
has done a lot for me, so I should not complain about money.
But
of late, my idealistic vision of my country has really come
crashing down, harder and faster than ever before.
What
I learned..
*
I read about the annual fiasco involving non-bumiputera
top scorers who are denied entry to critical courses at
local universities and are offered forestry and fisheries
instead. (My cousin scored 10A1's for SPM and yet was denied
a scholarship).
*
I read about UMNO Youth attacking the so-called
meritocracy system because there are less than 60% of Malay
students in law and pharmacy, whilst conveniently keeping
silent about the fact that 90% of overseas scholarship recipients
are Malays and that Malays form the vast majority in courses
like medicine, accountancy and engineering at local universities.
*
I read about the Higher Education Minister promising
that non-bumiputera Malaysians will never ever step foot
into UiTM.
*
I read about a poor Chinese teacher's daughter
with 11A1's being denied a scholarship, while I know some
Malay friends who scored 7A's and whose parents are millionaires
being given scholarships.
*
I read about the brilliant Prof. K.S. Jomo, who
was denied a promotion to Senior Professor (not even to
Head of Department), although he was backed by references
from three Nobel Prize winners. Of
course, his talent is recognised by a prestigious appointment
at the United Nations.
*
I read about UMNO Youth accusing Chinese schools
of being detrimental to racial integration, while demanding
that Mara Junior Science Colleges and other residential
schools be kept only for Malays.
*
I read about the Malay newspaper editors attacking
the private sector for not appointing enough Malays to senior
management level, whilst insisting that the government always
ensure that Malays dominate anything government-related.
*
I read that at our local universities, not a single
Vice-Chancellor or Deputy Vice-Chancellor is non-Malay.
*
I read that in the government, not a single Secretary-General
of any ministry is non-Malay. The same goes for all government
agencies like the police, armed forces, etc.
*
I read about UMNO screaming for the Malay Agenda,
but accusing everyone else of racism for whispering about
equality.
*
I read about a poor Indian lady having to pay full
price for a low-cost house after being dispossessed from
a plantation, whilst Malay millionaires demand their 10%
bumiputera discount when buying RM2 million bungalows in
a gated community.
*
I read about my beloved national schools becoming
more and more Islamic by the day, enforced by overzealous
principals.
I
read about my Form 4 World History (Sejarah Dunia)
syllabus, which now contains only * one chapter of world
history, with Islamic history covering the rest of the book.
As I
read all this, I tremble with fear. I love my country and
long to return. I am willing to take a 70% pay cut. I am
willing to face a demotion.
I honestly
want to contribute my expertise in complex financial services
and capital markets. But really, is there a future for me,
for my children and for their children? I am truly frightened.
I can
deal with the lack of democracy, the lack of press freedom,
the ISA, our inefficient and bureaucratic civil service,
our awful manners and even a little corruption. But I cannot
deal with racism in my homeland.
I think this is the single biggest factor which is keeping
people like myself away. And bear in mind - there are so
many of us (researchers, scientists, bankers, economists,
lawyers, academics, etc.).
What
people read about in Malaysia (like Dr Terence Gomez) is
but the tiniest tip of the iceberg.
You
will be amazed to know about Malaysians denied JPA scholarships
(which would have made them civil servants), took loans
to attend Ivy League universities, but who are later asked
to advise our government (on IT, economics, etc.) at fees
running to millions of US dollars.
Such information will never be published because it is politically
incorrect.
As a
Christian, I pray for God's blessing on this great country
of ours. I pray that He blesses our leaders with the foresight
and humanity to see that this will not work and cannot continue.
I pray
that they will have the strength to make our country a home
for all Malaysians and that they will have mercy for the
poor, including the non-Malays. I pray for true racial harmony
and acceptance (not just tolerance) in Malaysia.
Yours sincerely,
"A very frightened
Malaysian abroad"