Pages

Saturday, May 09, 2026

Historians want to protect their rice bowl, Khairy












Mariam Mokhtar
Published: May 8, 2026 2:02 PM
Updated: 4:02 PM




COMMENT | It is disingenuous of Khairy Jamaluddin to criticise Malaysian historians and experts as “cowardly professors” who refuse to speak out while misinformation about the nation’s past continues to spread.

It is always easier when the narrative becomes uncomfortable to blame those who describe it rather than those who shaped its boundaries.

The former minister’s outburst fits neatly into a familiar political reflex, that confusion in public understanding must be the fault of those who failed to speak loudly enough. This framing is too convenient, and it mistakes the symptom for the system.

So, why is Khairy focusing on the silence of historians, instead of the political environment that shaped what could be safely said in the first place?

The core issue is not academic courage; it is political history.

Malaysia’s post-independence nation-building project, especially during the strong Umno era, was deeply shaped by affirmative action policies and the ideological framing of “Ketuanan Melayu” (Malay supremacy) as a central pillar of state identity and political legitimacy.




Our history was never written in a vacuum of pure academic curiosity because it has always existed inside this larger political architecture. These discriminatory policies were further reinforced through the Biro Tata Negara (BTN or National Civics Bureau).

Khairy was possibly referring to International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM) academic Solehah Yaacob, whose claims about ancient Romans learning about shipbuilding from the Malays made Malaysia a laughing stock, yet again.

She is not the only lecturer to distort early Malayan history. Even once respected historians have been known to “jaga periuk nasi” (guarding one’s rice pot) and toe the official line.


Challenging narratives

I once attended a lecture in Ipoh in 2011, called “Peristiwa Bukit Kepong, Siapa Wira Sebenar?” (Bukit Kepong Incident, who were the real heroes?)

Two of the speakers were former police chief Haniff Omar and historian Khoo Kay Kim, who said Malaya was never colonised by the British. The audience stared dumbfounded, but few dared to counter them. A majority of the audience were police officers and members of the security forces.


Historian Khoo Kay Kim


Khoo’s comments did not go unnoticed because his former student, Rachel Leow, wrote him an open letter, which went viral. She was a PhD student at Cambridge, and she dared to correct him.

Umno policies of the 1980s-1990s shaped institutional behaviour. Public narratives were tightly controlled. Some were encouraged, others were treated cautiously, and those that generated controversy were banned. Self-censorship and silence became the new norm.

So when people ask why historians appear silent or restrained, the answer they give is not just fear. It is also because of structure.

Post 1969, the political atmosphere punished perceived challenges to sensitive identity frameworks. In time, institutions naturally learned to operate carefully within those boundaries. Public history then took shape.


Non-Malay erasure

Take Kuala Lumpur.

Critics claim that Yap Ah Loy, one of the key founders of modern Kuala Lumpur, has been reduced to little more than a passing mention in school narratives.

The parents who complained about this distortion of our early history say this is not about one missing name. They worry about how stories get flattened over time.

The narrative promoted by some Umno leaders five decades ago was that non-Malays were relatively recent arrivals to the country, having come only within the last 200 years.

Critics argue that this framing ignored the much older presence of Chinese and Indian communities in the Malay peninsula as miners, traders, and spice merchants who arrived through the monsoon trade networks centuries earlier.


Yap Ah Loy

Then there is the deeper past.

Sites such as Bujang Valley in Kedah reflect a long archaeological history of trade, industry, settlement, and Hindu-Buddhist cultural influence in early Southeast Asia.

Had this heritage been more fully preserved and allowed to flourish, with its many artefacts and ancient structures protected, Malaysia might today rival historical treasures such as Angkor Wat in Cambodia or Borobudur in Indonesia.

To many observers, the lack of urgency in preserving these sites gave the impression that the authorities preferred not to draw too much attention to the country’s non-Islamic historical roots.

Furthermore, the Orang Asli are the original settlers of Malaya, but they remain as a mere footnote in history books.


Inheriting an environment of caution

What many parents and some teachers describe to me is not a conspiracy. It is a caution. Certain historical topics, especially those touching on identity, origin narratives, or competing interpretations of early civilisation, may not be discussed freely in institutional settings.

Not because it is formally forbidden, but because, over time, a culture develops where stepping too far outside accepted framing feels risky, unnecessary, or professionally unwise.




Khairy may have criticised historians, but academic caution is not the root problem. This pattern of silence among experts is not unique to history.

In mining, industry, and engineering, warnings about hill development, slope stability, radiation, and ecological risks are often raised early, and without drama.

Yet, those warnings frequently gain public attention only after a disaster forces visibility.

Then the same questions return: who knew, who warned, and why was it not acted on sooner?

The issue is not simply “cowardly professors”. That framing is too easy. It shifts attention away from the longer political and institutional history that shaped what could be safely said, and what could not.

Historians did not design that environment. They inherited it.

And when political actors now express frustration at historical confusion, the harder question is not why some academics are quiet, but how the boundaries of acceptable speech were formed in the first place, and by whom.

History is not only written in books.

It is shaped by political frameworks, institutional incentives, and the long shadow of national narratives, including “Ketuanan Melayu” as a defining feature of Malaysia’s post-independence political architecture.



MARIAM MOKHTAR is a defender of the truth, the admiral-general of the Green Bean Army, and the president of the Perak Liberation Organisation (PLO). Blog, X.


11 comments:

  1. In purely legalisatic terms, it is true that the Brits adroitly never colonised the Malay States outright , only actual Crown colonies being the Straits Settlements, Penang, Malacca and Singapore.

    The Malay States remained "Ruled" by the Malay Rulers, but each had to accept either a British Resident or Advisor whose "advice" had to be followed , except in matters of Islamic religion or Malay Customs.
    Later, there followed British Civil Service Staff to ensure British administrative decisions were carried out, as well as military and police to ensure no opposition to the British administration.

    A few hundred to later a few thousand Brits controlled a population of millions of Malayans.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. only now u know pommie's colonization tactics.

      Wow…

      Delete
  2. One Day in the Future, Historians will record an AMAZING SUPERHUMAN FEAT….

    that on the day Doctors Without Borders says there is malnutrition in Gaza due to a lack of aid…..

    …..more than 2,500 Palestinians ran in Gaza as part of the 10th Palestine International Marathon sponsored by Egypt and held simultaneously in Bethlehem and the Strip for the first time.

    https://x.com/eyakoby/status/2052763978187616308?s=46

    ReplyDelete
  3. History Will Also Record The Truth Behind ICC’s charge Against Netanyahu….

    TWO YEARS have passed still no evidence….

    The video that gives nightmares to the Pro-Palestinians 😱🇵🇸

    The ICC prosecutor who indicted Netanyahu says it: he didn't pursue the genocide charge because the evidence still isn't there!

    Two years that the whole pack has been lying to you.

    Two years that they've decided they know better than the competent courts, from their couches.

    Two years that they've delivered the verdict before the trial.

    Two years that they've trampled the presumption of innocence, which for them doesn't apply to Jews.

    That's what antisemitism is: accusing Jews of the worst evils, without providing any evidence.

    Their activist narrative dressed up as international law has collapsed.

    https://x.com/bob_hasbara/status/2052670683725889804?s=46

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. yaloh, that his-story written by that mfering bibi's doggies

      Delete
  4. History please record this accurately, not the lies about famine…..

    I am 17 years old. I went into Gaza with my own camera. 📸
    What I saw is the opposite of what you see on the news. Thousands of aid trucks and endless supplies. The world is being lied to, and it’s time to show the truth. 🚛
    WATCH THIS. 👇

    https://x.com/marwanjaberr/status/2052918147410190627?s=46

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. wakakakaka… a 17yr old know-nothing's fart

      Delete
  5. The Name “Green Party” takes on New Meaning in YewKay….Target Net Zero Means Zero Bumiputra White People.

    🚨 Green Party “victory” video shows zero English spoken.

    A room full of foreign languages celebrating their takeover of a British council.

    This is what replacement looks like in real time.

    Britain is being erased without a single shot fired.

    https://x.com/realdonkeith/status/2052703935337509074?s=46

    ReplyDelete
  6. Oh it’s brilliant. This is Starmer in 2020

    I suggest he watches this on loop

    “When you lose an election in a democracy, you deserve to… You don’t look at the electorate and ask them ‘what were you thinking?’ You look at yourself and ask ‘what were we doing?’”

    GLORIOUS 🔥

    https://x.com/matt_camenzuli/status/2052935856177164593?s=46

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mfer, goes check that pommie bulldog's speech when he was rejected by the pommies after the WWII & faded into a political nowhere.

      Mmmm… know who that bulldog is?

      Delete