Traveling
on an air-conditioned bus along Malaysia's North-South Highway to Kuala Lumpur
several months ago could not sensibly be compared to the freedom ride from
Selma to Montgomery. But for the dark-skinned man seated near me, it could well
have been a similar historic journey. He was a Malaysian activist of
Tamil-Indian descent traveling from Johor Bahru to the capital to lend
political support to five Indian lawyers detained indefinitely without trail
under Malaysia's draconian internal security law. The lawyers are leaders of
the Hindu Rights Action Force or HINDRAF, which led a demonstration of 20,000
Indians in the capital last November. Four of them, including HINDRAF legal
advisor M. Manoharan, campaigned this year for seats in Parliament from their
jail cells and won. The outcome of the
March 8th general elections was a shock. Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's National Front coalition
was expected to win hands-down, but with far less Indian support than in 2004
when it received close to 80 percent of Indian votes. What happened instead, due largely to HINDRAF, was the toppling
of the old guard. The groups principal
aim was to weaken Badawi's allies in the Malaysian Indian Congress, whom many
Indians believe did little to address racial discrimination leveled at
Tamil-Indian communities. Indian resentment had been building up for decades
over what many see as substandard housing, separate but unequal education, and,
until the practice was recently halted, the demolition of half a dozen Hindu
temples.
As a rule, Indians in Malaysia
do not consider themselves "black" in any Westernized racialized sense of the
word. But the man on the bus was the color of charcoal. He and fellow mainly
dark-skinned Indians form less than ten percent of the country's twenty-five
million people. Chinese make up twenty-four percent. The majority are Malays,
who benefit from the New Economic Policy enacted in the 1970s that grants them
special preferences in education, housing and civil service employment. The
Tamil man on the bus compared Malay dominance to white skin privilege in the
United States. That may be overstating the degree to which Malays are favored,
but as I traveled from city to city documenting the treatment of Indians,I
encountered a set of "black experiences" not unlike my own.
Like
"your 1963 March on Washington," said Giwi Katharah of the Tamil Foundation, an
NGO representing the educational interests of Malaysia's Indians, "the (November 25th) rally woke up a
traditionally passive population that's been tolerant too long of their second
class citizenship. It gave Tamils a common sense of purpose."
On
a former rubber plantation not far from the capital, I walked through a muddy,
mosquito inhabited field to speak with a 43-year-old woman named Shantie. Her
family, along with fifty others, is being evicted from the land harvested by
her grandfather and his father before that. The tiny Tamil plantation school is
slated to be rebuilt on a plot of land abutting a cemetery. That was the final
straw for Shantie, who told me she had never protested anything until she was
told to leave her home. "I never get proper schooling for my children, and I do
not want to leave my land, so I joined demonstrations on November 25th. The
tear gas, the water hoses. I could not breathe. If government consider Indian
rights than we can see our future."
Another
black woman a long time ago told me something along those same lines. One night
in Detroit, while watching grainy TV images of civil rights activists being
bitten by police dogs, my mother decided then and there to take part in her
first demonstration that was scheduled downtown a week later in support of
Freedom Riders down south. She said it
was for us--her children. A few years later, in 1968, our neighborhood went up
in smoke with news of Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination. It was a turning
point in my young life, as I set out to report on race as a direct consequence
of that period.
The
worst race riots in Malaysia's history had a similar impact on M. Kulasegaran,
an Indian MP from Ipoh. The violence of May 13, 1969 pitted Malays known as
Bumiputra or "sons of the soil" against the economically dominant Chinese.
Indians for the most part stayed on the sidelines. But Kulasegaran was picked
up by police the next day while out selling biscuits. When his mother arrived
to pluck him from the police station, he said all he saw was "powerlessness in
her eyes." That was the spark for his life-long obsession with politics,
culminating in his election to Parliament thirty years later. Today Kulasegaran
is part of the main Indian opposition, which has seen its influence grow since
the general election. "Those days when we would go and speak and get one hundred
people is over. Now the minimum that show up to hear us is one thousand to two
thousand people."
The
now frequent Tamil demonstrations have triggered a backlash from the Malay
majority. Government critics and editorial writers for the two major newspapers
accuse HINDRAF and its allies of trying to re-ignite the fires of 1969. Tamil leaders
in turn have accused the government of fomenting "ethnic cleansing," though I saw
nothing to suggest the existence of such a policy. Still, the fact that many Indians believe this to be true should
be of concern to the Malaysian government, which has worked hard over its 51
years of independence to cultivate a worldwide image of tolerance and racial
harmony. That idyllic projection is now threatened by activists who say they
will continue to turn out Tamil communities in a show of force. A Tamil academic,
Dr. S. Nagarajan, said in the same way that the 1963 march on Washington
embarrassed the US into enforcing basic constitutional rights, Indians hope to
use international media attention to force Malaysia to live up to its
egalitarian creed.
In
the aftermath of the March 8th general elections, HINDRAF leaders
are looking to build a permanent grassroots opposition to the Malay and Indian
political status quo in the form of an organization they call Makkal Sakthi or
Peoples Power. Like many African Americans, some even dream of one day having a
"black" president. Says MP Kulasegaran, "There is a new civil rights movement
here. And I believe some changes can take place. It's like Barack Obama says,
'yes, we can.
But
the wishes of most ordinary Tamils are far more modest. Shantie, for one, says
she simply wants well-built schools that are situated nowhere near cemeteries
or any other marker for the dead.
Phillip Martin is a correspondent for PRI's The World, reporting on social conditions surrounding skin color in a special series of international reports called "The Color Initiative," which is funded in part by the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities.