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Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Intentionality

 
As little boys, we were all naughty; in one way or other. Often, after one throws a stone that breaks glass, what is the point of saying we had no intention to break the glass. We did; regardless of purity of intentions.

Therefore, I find the attorney-general’s (AG) statement that there was no intentionality for wrong-doing in the Perkasa leader’s statement more telling about the AG and his way of thinking than whether the leader did in fact mean to burn the Malay Bibles. The AG is merely imputing intentions of another.

Intentionality in Organisational Behaviour is a complex subject of serious study. In fact, my professor of public administration, Dr Michael Harmon, wrote two books on this subject. One is called ‘Action Theory’ and the other is called ‘Organizational Theory for Public Administration’. Both are excellent and should be made compulsory reading for all those who want and intent to join public services; both policy people and execution people.

If the AG is politically neutral he would not have expressed his views about this matter without explicit evidence which leads to that conclusion. But, now it seems that he has assumed the role of pseudo-investigator, evidence evaluator, and judge about the prosecution probabilities.

If, in fact there was a police investigation about his statement, then the AG must reveal the actual evidence of the tape-recording, and/or actual speech with the real text to prove there was no evidence of intentionality to actually burn Bibles.

He must prove that it was only conjecture about the real feelings of Malay Muslims (and, mind you, not Arab Muslims) and their intentions, and if such Malay Bibles were in fact distributed with ‘Allah’ in the text to refer to God Almighty; that is, the God of Abraham, Isaac (Ishmael) and Jacob.

The actual context of the statement is what can help us resolve this matter; not the AG’s opinion or even any sultan’s opinion. And, as with the recent Cameron Highlands case, there is no point for that sultan to lose his temper and show anger, after the horses have bolted the stable, so to say. Why not present the evidence about who is doing all this illegal logging; then, we will all know the truth.

Truth will set us free

I am a very big truth bug. I want to know the truth about any matter and will not stop my pursuit until I know the truth about whatever the matter, and however small it is. A colleague of mine at the International Trade and Industry Ministry (Miti) once told me, “Just let sleeping dogs lie; do not bug truth and truth will not bug you!” Wrong.

I believe that truth will set us free. At least that is what the bible promises and I have experienced. Truth has that freeing value; and it is an existential feeling about all matters in life, whether past, present, or future issues. Christians believe Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life. That is either a fact, and therefore true; or a lie and therefore not true.

Truth matters in all of life, and therefore we have to hold all public personalities to these truths that matter. No goon can be allowed to say that he can burn the Bible, regardless of whether it is a Malay, Arabic, or English bible and get away with such ‘irreverent language, without even a basic reprimand’.

Even if it was not a threat; one has to view the burning any religious books as sacrilegious; premised upon our Rukunegara. Instead, we get a skewed-eyed AG who cannot distinguish between lies and truth.

Let me make my point in even more strident terms so that the goons can understand. If ‘Allah’ is the one and only true word for God; and the Arabs have been using this word for God since the times before Islam, and the Prophet; how can 21st Century Melayus suddenly claim this pre-Arabic and pre-Islamic word for God and reduce it now into a Malay word, and to be used only by Malays in Melayusia.

It is when this is done that I argue that we are not living in Melayusia but Malaysia. Those who want to live in Melayusia should maybe move to any geography wherein the Malay-Muslim version of all interpretation about life and living become a worldview of life and for life. Then, even the guillotine can be freely used because then we become ‘katak dibawah tempurung’.

The roof of that worldview is only the top of the coconut shell and nothing else really matters; including all other objective truths. But then we forget that even our God is reduced to the coconut shell’s greatness with its sky. One can really understand all this through a movie; please go and watch ‘The God’s must be crazy!’

Negaraku; tanah tumpahnya darahku?

We are Royal Military College (RMC) Old Puteras! Next year, my intake from 1965 celebrates our golden anniversary of 50 years of friendship. We are a multi-ethnic group of Old Puteras (OPs) who were about 100 in our year of intake. Three of us were even Singaporeans; the only three from Singapore ever, because in that year, too, Singapore left to become a nation-state.  They too celebrate 50 next year!

RMC trained us to salute the flag of the Federation; and we did this every weekend at parade. We were taught to live, fight, and die for the flag. In our time, we had free choice as to what we wanted to do after we left the F/RMC, whether after two or four years.

Not many of us actually joined the Armed Forces of Malaysia and fought for this nation-state? To my count, not more than 10. Does that mean, the others were not “shedding blood” for our nation-state, as implied within our song; our national anthem? Not really.

It was a metaphorical way of saying that we must always find ways to put the national interest over and above one’s personal, or private, or communal interest. Then we are trained to become an officer and a gentleman as we were; never otherwise. If we cannot do this objectively and truthfully; we are still only kampung boys and must simply admit that.

Negara-Ku; the movement of Rakyat Malaysia

When Sarawak did not permit entry of Ambiga Sreenevasan into their state, it was an insult to the meaning of Malaysian-ness. If the peninsular Malayans cannot sing and mean the same words as did the Sabahans and Sarawakians; then we are not yet one country.

That is why we are arguing for a movement of people groups to sing and understand our song all over again; but, without a narrower worldviews being propagated by the weaker ethnicities of Malaysians; defined by their emotional view of what is this nation-state we call Malaysia.

Negara-Ku is a peoples’ movement to reclaim this land from our politicians and narrow minded bigots who think that only their worldview defines all truths that matter. They even redefine the federal constitution and the Rukunegara as the starting foundations of who we are and can become. Let us become a Negara-Ku; a jointly shared community of personal visions of/for what our land of promise can become, if we all can reclaim it; each in our small way.




KJ JOHN was in public service for 29 years. The views expressed here are his personal views and not those of any institution he is involved with. Write to him at kjjohn@ohmsi.net with any feedback or views.

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