What has really gone wrong, Doctor?
Monday, 14 December 2009
Jufrie Mahmood
I
was sad and somewhat amused - but certainly not surprised - over a
recent report that Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, Minister in Charge of Muslim
Affairs, does not know what to do to solve some of the more serious
problems that ail the community under his charge.
And I am not
at all surprised if he is not even aware of some other problems that
have already beset the community and their root causes.
But how can he not know when he seems to be in close touch with
every single institution within the Malay/Muslim community? Can it be
that he has also surrounded himself with the proverbial inner circle of
the emperor that dares not tell him that he has no clothes on?
Every
single Malay/Muslim organization, every mosque committee and the whose
who in the community falls within his ambit. Leadership forums are
supposed to be held regularly to highlight, keep track of and explore
solutions to problems faced by the community.
Have these
“leaders” not told him that a large section, especially those in the
lower rungs, of the community is of late facing the greatest ever
challenge in their lives trying to make ends meet? Have they not told
him that the perennial drug problem is still haunting the community? He
surely cannot be unaware that the high rate of teen marriages and
divorces do not only beset young couples but are also increasingly
afflicting elderly couples partly because money is never enough?
Is
he not aware that there are more people begging for alms outside the
gates of mosques and the Geylang food outlets? Is he not told that more
and more people are losing their homes due to their inability to
service their mortgages to commercial banks?
What is more
important is to identify the causes. Only then can we begin to look for
solutions. The Malay/Muslim community has the resources to tackle these
problems. What with the assets under the charge of the Islamic
Religious Council of Singapore (MUIS)? Warees, the property arm of the
council, once bragged that it was managing assets worth half-a-billion
dollars. With modest annual returns of just 5%, for example, the
community will have a war chest of $25 million every year to battle the
community’s many ills.
This year it gave the community less than
$2 million, which represents less than half per cent of the half
billion dollars worth of assets. How did the rest of the returns spend?
We should not splurge only on constructing beautiful mosques and other
buildings. Some of the money should be put aside to build on the
software, the spiritual foundation and tenacity of the community. This
matter can be further elaborated in a future write-up.
And it is
no exaggeration to say that some of the problems that beset the
community got to do with the climate of fear which haunts the so-called
community leaders. When people fear you they don’t normally tell you
the truth. They don’t lie but they just don’t tell the truth.
Perhaps
they dare not tell you that the influx of foreign ‘talent’ is adversely
affecting the livelihood of not only the lower income Malays but also
those in the middle rung as well. When people lose their jobs they add
to the problems of the community and to the nation. When wages are
depressed people lose heart and productivity falls.
When they
work long hours or even take up an additional job to supplement their
low income their family life suffers. When the wives go out to work to
help their husbands cope with the ever-increasing cost of living, the
children get neglected. The children’s performance in school gets a
knock and inevitably their grades fall. The cycle goes on.
When
they work under a constant threat of being retrenched and substituted
with foreign ‘talent’ they become so stressed up that their health
suffers. When they fall sick they worry that they would not be able to
afford the medical bill.
In the meantime leaders hold forums
after forums without ever identifying the real problems, let alone find
solutions that can work. They are afraid of being chastised for going
against government policy even though the policy is slowly but surely
bringing more misery to members of their own community.
Like
their so-called leaders in the governing party, these community leaders
too are reluctant to tell their political masters that certain policies
which discriminate against the community are not good for the country’s
long-term interest. They dare not say that the policy on casinos is
against their religious principles. They dare not debunk their
political leader’s argument that the wearing of the tudung
(headscarf) in schools will cause disunity among the different races
even though such ruling goes against the Constitution which guarantees
religious freedom. They don’t dare to continue saying that SAP schools
are not fair to the community, will breed potential leaders who may not
know how to interact with other communities and press for their
abolition.
They dare not ……. they dare not ….. they dare not …….. that is what is ailing society!
Jufrie Mahmood is SDP's CEC member and a veteran opposition politician.
http://www.yoursdp.org/index.php/perspective/vantage/3184-what-has-really-gone-wrong-doctor