Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Winds of Change

One generation ago, parents insisted that children should get dressed on a Sunday morning for a family outing at the temple. Children obediently followed with raising any objections. Without fail, they would diligently follow the proceedings in the temple and partake in their activities.
The newer generation, however, being more vocal and assertive in their likes and dislikes, just stay from the temples as they find more interesting things to do outside the temple during the designated prayer times on Sunday mornings. As more and more youngsters of Generation-Y and beyond are not conversant in their mother tongues, they find the whole proceedings an exercise in futility as the lingua franca in most temple activities and sermons are neither English nor Malay!
To draw back these group of people to the path of righteousness and prevent them from going astray, one the temples I go to occasionally have started to have weekly 20-minute talk by non-religious figures (regular people with regular clothes minus the bodily applications of holy ashes or sandalwood paste)  in English on topics related to Hinduism. This particular abode of worship have also started youth dance classes, language classes, social services (to help the needy, not guest relations, of course!) and have even included youngsters in their temple committee!
In another church, the music accompaniment during the services is by a band akin to a rock and roll band.  The idea behind this move is to draw the young congregation back to the House of God. In most first world countries, studies have shown that people only go to church on their wedding or somebody's funeral (and theirs too, they are sent to, naturally).
Just like a snake charmer who convinces his spectators that his snakes (who are naturally deaf to sounds) are indeed dancing to their tune, modern day parents are dancing around with snake charmers' flute like madmen trying to get the children do what is good for them as so they perceive. They do not want their dear beloveds to live to regret missing it. But is it really good for them? Who knows? Only time will tell... At least the parents' conscious is clear!

Tuesday, 1 March 2011

Too posh to push?

A few weeks ago, there was a phone in session over the radio (BFM) on the Damansara Heights (situated in a luxurious uptown part of KL) Residents' Association President, Tan Sri Abdul Aziz Abd Rahaman's statement where he had the cheek to tell the press that his neighbours do not want the MRT stations to be located anywhere near their neighbourhood as they preferred to drive in their Jaguars and their other luxury cars!
Passengers on a train in Bihar
' “People in our area will not use this (the MRT). People from other areas... pass through our area to go to town. That makes the whole place jammed (already),” he added. Abdul Aziz also pointed out that land was scarce in the affluent neighbourhood, which counts ministers, tycoons and top civil servants as among its residents.'
Here we are, everybody trying to crack their heads trying to draft a master plan to modernize our public transportation in line with any developed nation but it seems now that everything is just lip service. Sure, the ministers and the learned individuals encourage the masses to car pool and use public transport. This is, however, only for others to follow, so much for leadership by example. I remember one of my teachers in secondary school who had a problem with the bottle used to tell us, "Do as I say, not as I do!" The same analogy can be applied here. We have one set of rules for the haves and one for the have not!
Probably, the affluent passengers are too posh to push for a place in the bus just we did many years ago.
Posh spice
Talking about too posh to push, gone are the days when ladies are going to take the uncertainty of labour and the gruelling pain of parturition lying down (no pun intended). Just like the many high ranking position that they hold and the split second decisions that they need to make, they want to be in control. Or are they simply too posh to push, be put in a helpless situation where they are at the mercy and compassion of lowly medical and midwifery staff. Hence, many posh mothers rather opt to go under knife for a Caesarean section than spontaneous natural labour. They cite age factor, conserving anatomical structures, reducing incidence of urinary problems in later life as well as myriad of other reasons, including delivering baby at an auspicious time when the stars are at a pleasing constellation so that their newborns' lives would be as posh as theirs! 

http://www.malaysia-today.net/mtcolumns/newscommentaries/38184-rich-say-dont-need-mrt-but-poor-welcome-it

History’s shifting sands


TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 2011

Aljazeera: History’s shifting sands... by Mark LeVine

The revolutions sweeping the Arab world indicate a tectonic shift in the global balance of people power
by Mark LeVine 
Aljazeera, 26 Feb 2011 

For decades, even centuries, the peoples of the Arab world have been told by Europeans and, later, Americans that their societies were stagnant and backward. According to Lord Cromer, author of the 1908 pseudo-history Modern Egypt, their progress was “arrested” by the very fact of their being Muslim, by virtue of which their minds were as “strange” to that of a modern Western man “as would be the mind of an inhabitant of Saturn”.

The only hope of reshaping their minds towards a more earthly disposition was to accept Western tutelage, supervision, and even rule “until such time as they [we]re able to stand alone,” in the words of the League of Nations’ Mandate. Whether it was Napoleon claiming fraternité with Egyptians in fin-de-siècle Cairo or George W. Bush claiming similar amity with Iraqis two centuries later, the message, and the means of delivering it, have been consistent.

Ever since Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti, the great Egyptian chronicler of the French invasion of Egypt, brilliantly dissected Napoleon’s epistle to Egyptians, the peoples of the Middle East have seen through the Western protestations of benevolence and altruism to the naked self-interest that has always laid at the heart of great power politics. But the hypocrisy behind Western policies never stopped millions of people across the region from admiring and fighting for the ideals of freedom, progress and democracy they promised.

Even with the rise of a swaggeringly belligerent American foreign policy after September 11 on the one hand, and of China as a viable economic alternative to US global dominance on the other, the US’ melting pot democracy and seemingly endless potential for renewal and growth offered a model for the future.

Trading places
But something has changed. An epochal shift of historical momentum has occurred whose implications have yet to be imagined, never mind assessed. In the space of a month, the intellectual, political and ideological centre of gravity in the world has shifted from the far West (America) and far East (China, whose unchecked growth and continued political oppression are clearly not a model for the region) back to the Middle – to Egypt, the mother of all civilization, and other young societies across the Middle East and North Africa.

Standing amidst hundreds of thousands of Egyptians in Tahrir Square seizing control of their destiny it suddenly seemed that our own leaders have become, if not quite pharaohs, then mamluks, more concerned with satisfying their greed for wealth and power than with bringing their countries together to achieve a measure of progress and modernity in the new century. Nor does China, which has offered its model of state-led authoritarian capitalist development coupled with social liberalisation as an alternative to the developing world, seem like a desirable option to the people risking death for democracy in the streets of capitals across the Arab world and Iran.

Instead, Egyptians, Tunisians and other peoples of the region fighting for revolutionary political and economic change have, without warning, leapfrogged over the US and China and grabbed history’s reins. Suddenly, it is the young activists of Tahrir who are the example for the world, while the great powers seem mired in old thinking and outdated systems. From the perspective of “independence” squares across the region, the US looks ideologically stagnant and even backwards, filled with irrational people and political and economic elites incapable of conceiving of changes that are so obvious to the rest of the world.

Foundations sinking into the sands?
Although she likely did not intend it, when Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, warned Arab leaders in early January that they must “reform” lest their systems “sink in the sand” her words were as relevant in Washington as they were in Tunis, Tripoli, Cairo or Sanaa. But Americans – the people as much as their leaders – are so busy dismantling the social, political and economic foundations of their former greatness that they are unable to see how much they have become like the stereotype of the traditional Middle Eastern society that for so long was used to justify, alternately (and sometimes simultaneously) supporting authoritarian leaders or imposing foreign rule.

A well known Egyptian labour organiser, Kamal Abbas, made a video telling Americans from Tahrir that “we and all the people of the world stand on your side and give you our full support”. It is a good thing, because it is clear Americans need all the support they can get. “I want you to know,” he continued, “that no power can challenge the will of the people when they believe in their rights. When they raise their voices loud and clear and struggle against exploitation.”

Aren’t such lines supposed to be uttered by American presidents instead of Egyptian union activists?
Similarly, in Morocco activists made a video before their own ‘day of rage’ where they explained why they were taking to the streets. Among the reasons, “because I want a free and equal morocco for all citizens,” “so that all Moroccans will be equal,” so that education and health care “will be accessible to everyone, not only the rich,” in order that “labour rights will be respected and exploitation put to an end,” and to “hold accountable those who ruined this country”.

Can one even imagine millions of Americans taking to the streets in a day of rage to demand such rights?

“Stand firm and don’t waiver …. Victory always belongs to the people who stand firm and demand their just rights,” Kamal Abbas urged Americans. When did they forget this basic fact of history?
From top to bottom

The problem clearly starts from the top and continues to the grass roots. Barack Obama campaigned for the presidency on the slogan “Yes we can!” But whether caving in to Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, on settlements, or standing by as Republicans wage a jihad on the working people of Wisconsin, the president has refused to stand up for principles that were once the bedrock of American democracy and foreign policy.

The American people are equally to blame, as increasingly, those without healthcare, job security or pensions seem intent on dragging down the lucky few unionised workers who still have them rather than engage in the hard work of demanding the same rights for themselves.

The top one per cent of Americans, who now earn more than the bottom 50 per cent of the country combined, could not have scripted it any better if they had tried. They have achieved a feat that Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Hosni Mubarak and their fellow cleptocrats could only envy (the poorest 20 per cent of the population in Tunisia and Egypt actually earn a larger share of national income than does their counterpart in the US).

The situation is so desperate that a well known singer and activist contacted me in Cairo to ask organisers of Tahrir to send words of support for union workers in Wisconsin. Yet “Madison is the new Tahrir” remains a dream with little hope of becoming reality, even as Cairenes take time out from their own revolution proudly to order pizza for their fellow protesters in Wisconsin.

The power of youth and workers
In Egypt, workers continue to strike, risking the ire of the military junta that has yet to release political prisoners or get rid of the emergency law. It was their efforts, more than perhaps anyone else, that pushed the revolution over the top at the moment when people feared the Mubarak regime could ride out the protests. For their part, Americans have all but forgotten that the “golden years” of the 1950s and 1960s were only golden to so many people because unions were strong and ensured that the majority of the country’s wealth remained in the hands of the middle class or was spent on programmes to improve public infrastructure across the board.

The youth of the Arab world, until yesterday considered a “demographic bomb” waiting to explode in religious militancy and Islamo-fascism, is suddenly revealed to be a demographic gift, providing precisely the vigour and imagination that for generations the people of the region have been told they lacked. They have wired – or more precisely today, unwired – themselves for democracy, creating virtual and real public spheres were people from across the political, economic and social spectrum are coming together in common purpose. Meanwhile, in the US it seems young people are chained to their iPods, iPhones and social media, which has anesthetised and depoliticised them in inverse proportion to its liberating effect on their cohorts across the ocean.

Indeed, the majority of young people today are so focused on satisfying their immediate economic needs and interests that they are largely incapable of thinking or acting collectively or proactively. Like frogs being slowly boiled alive, they are adjusting to each new setback – a tuition increase, here, lower job prospects there – desperately hoping to get a competitive edge in a system that is increasingly stacked against them.

Will Ibn Khaldun be proved right?
It now seems clear that hoping for the Obama administration to support real democracy in the Middle East is probably too much to ask, since it cannot even support full democracy and economic and social rights for the majority of people at home. More and more, the US feels not just increasingly “irrelevant” on the world stage, as many commentators have described its waning position in the Middle East, but like a giant ship heading for an iceberg while the passengers and crew argue about how to arrange the deck chairs.

Luckily, inspiration has arrived, albeit from what to a ‘Western’ eye seems like the unlikeliest of sources. The question is: Can the US have a Tahrir moment, or as the great Arab historian Ibn Khaldun would have predicted, has it entered the irreversible downward spiral that is the fate of all great civilizations once they lose the social purpose and solidarity that helped make them great in the first place?

It is still too early to say for sure, but as of today it seems that the reins of history have surely passed out of America’s hands.

Mark LeVine is a professor of history at UC Irvine and senior visiting researcher at the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies at Lund University in Sweden. He has authored several books including Overthrowing Geography: Jaffa, Tel Aviv and the Struggle for Palestine (University of California Press, 2005) and An Impossible Peace: Israel/Palestine Since 1989 (Zed Books, 2009).

Sunday, 27 February 2011

The brothers who sold each other!

When we look at history, we can see that the world had never been peaceful in its entire existence. Since there is a lot of turmoil in the Moslem world of late, maybe we should look at the glory of the Islamic civilization and conquest. Like all religions in the world, Islam proclaim to be a religion of peace. History again and again has proved that, like any other religion of the world, there is too much of violence and blood shed, in-fighting and double crossing to justify the above.
The hey days of the Islamic empire spanned over the 8th century to 13th century AD when they hailed in many areas which would have made them more 'civilised'. Internal conflicts and animosity is the cause of their downfall. There were sporadic jubilations brought about by Mongol converts who later formed the the Ottoman Empire in Byzatnium, the Farsi empire and the Moghuls in India.
Even though religion seem to be an unifying lubricant amongst men, the medieval animal instinct in them try to differentiate each other via colour and creed.
The Arabs, being jealous and disgusted with the supposedly the 'lesser holy' Moslem, never like the idea of Turks leading the Moslem world. When the tide was low in World War 1, the Turks made a pact with the Germans whereas the Arabs with their enemies the British. This animosity goes on till today with the British and Americans having much influence in the Arab world. Coincidentally, the invaluable black gold is in abundance there. How convenient!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muslim_history

Life lived for others?

Many generations have called themselves as the lost generations as they had lost a good many years of their lives through no fault of theirs!
Ava Gardner
Ernest Hemingway, the great writer popularised this word through his novel 'The sun also rises' in 1926 which was made into a 1957 Hollywood movie starring Tyrone Powers, Ava Gardner and Errol Flynn. Interestingly, Hemingway's mother described it as the filthiest book she had ever read but wished his son success anyway. The rights to the movie changed many hands as the theme was deemed unfriendly to movie-goers.
In this movie/novel, the lost generation is referred to the men who came of age after the World War 1. They were probably affected by some kind of post traumatic stress unable to cope with the stress of everyday life. Some people also refer to the artistes loafing around Paris after the Great War. In recent times, the young Chinese Red Guards (1966 -76) during the Cultural Revolution are also called the Lost Generation. They basically wasted their lives shouting aimless slogan to boost one man zest to stay in power.
Dato Jacob George
Product of a new lost generation?
Now, I am looking at another kind of lost generation. I am talking about Indian boys of the early Generation-X and late Baby Boomers. They grew up doing things to satisfy their parents' expectations and to live up to the set community needs in an environment of strict upbringing where children are seen, not heard. This generation grew up living by certain standards and carved a place in society for themselves. These professionals now in comfortable lives, wanting to continue their legacy, now live to satisfy the whims and fancies of their children, bending over backwards and dancing to their every idiotic tune. They had and are living their lives for others, just like the soldiers of WW1 and the Red Guards who basically lived doing sweet worthless things to satisfy the needs of others so as to maintain the status quo and the betterment of mankind without asking themselves what this generation actually wants to do for themselves and satisfy their inner needs.
Now, how is the next generation, who has had all the comfort and pampering that they can get are going to continue and maintain their offspring. Is the age old Chinese proverb of 'Wealth never stays beyond the third generation' going to be proven true? Are they going to self discover themselves? Only time will tell and social scientists will have a field day righting about it in their theses.
P.S. I just watched this movie! Trying to live up for lost times!

Friday, 25 February 2011

Centre of the universe

Hindu mythology has it that Lord Shiva's consort Parvati had a unique fruit (Gnana Pazham) that she wanted to give to either of her sons, Ganesha and Murugan. It could not be divided half as its magical power would be lost. Hence, Parvati decreed that the first child to go across the universe would receive the booty. Murugan, using his peacock as his vehicle, flew across the universe in no time to claim his loot. When he returned, he was furious when Ganesha had already received the fruit as he circled his parents, claiming that his parents were his entire universe. That made Murugan raving mad and left home and stayed sulking in self-exile in Palani Hills. The hill was named 'Pazham Nee' (Palani, that he was the fruit of wisdom) by Shiva to cajole Murugan back but in vain.

Ganapati outwitting his brother
Nicolaus Copernicus and Galileo Galilei had to retract their scientific discovery that the Earth was in fact not the centre of the universe. The church, I guess, wanted to be in the centre of things and have the final say!
Just like that, the children nowadays have the unshakeable notion that they are the centre of the universe and the sun actually sets for them and they deserve everything to be done for them.If you go to any mall or public place, you may encounter toddlers terrorising and their imbecile parents (mostly fathers) running around like a joker trying to keep up with their whims and fancies. This will also be complemented by the grandparents (if there are up to it) to feed them with the more sugary drinks to make them more a brat than they already are! Probably, these grandparents are trying to repair their dented image after being a tyrant with their children a generation previously. The sum of all these is a child with narcissistic tendency and delusion of grandiosity.   

Thursday, 24 February 2011

Oh! When the brain goes down the drain!

Studying for a better future overseas?
So as usual, at this time of the year, the local newspapers will be plastered with news of how great the public examinations results were. They will give a breakdown of how the overall percentage of the result had improved. It is beginning to sound like a re-run of an old soap opera or broken gramophone record - just like me, too!
There would soon pictures of handicapped students passing with flying colours and children of hawkers and seamstresses obtaining good results.
A few days after that the announcement would be out on the closing date of applications for scholarship and entrance to universities. Like clock work, a few days after the results of acceptance of the above, flashed again on the newspapers, would be disgruntled parents who will be complaining about how his kids with such exemplary results failed to secure a place and how excellent his extra curricular results were. Then Michael Chong (the Public Complaints bureau of Malaysian Chinese Association) would appeared on the Star newspaper posing with the result slip, rejection letter, forlorn parents and kid. Then there would be knee jerk responses from ruling and opposition political leaders.
All these would die a natural death when Singapore offers them scholarships on a carrot attached to a long string. And this disgruntled students will leave their motherland, vowing never to return, eternally grateful to their 'Newfoundland'. Little will they realise that even if they wanted to, they would be tied down with a long pay-back clause that by the time the tenure expires, they would be too cushy there with probably too big an extra baggage to come back home to Malaysia (which disappointed them, anyway)!

The Kitchen Sink period