One Malaysia, Under God, Bipolar: Essays on Society, Schooling, and Salvation
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Description
Author: Azly Rahman
Format: Paperback 160pp.
Subjects: Politics, Religion, Education
ISBN: 9789670630878
Publisher: SIRD & WORLD WISE BOOK
Published: 2015
Price: RM25
In this fine collection of opinion pieces, the respected and
sagacious public intellectual Azly Rahman reflects on the political
machinations and cultural politics in Malaysia.
The book is a smorgasbord of commentaries on the poetics and
politics of cultural life in a nation that is struggling to transcend
its racialized structure to forge a cohesive and harmonious future. The
word ‘smorgasbord’ may give the impression that what is presented in
this book is simply a variety of ‘dishes’, hot and cold, familiar and
exotic, all separate and distinct treats laid out on a buffet table. It
is a smorgasbord with a difference: all the ‘culinary delights’ (read:
commentaries) are laid out in an orderly manner with a story line that
threads through the whole text. Organised around three main
themes—society, schooling, and salvation—the commentaries offer rich
food for thought and reflection and satisfy the intellectual and
political appetite of anyone interested in Malaysian affairs and
cultural politics in general….
Azly Rahman avers that ‘Political change needs social imagination
and critical sensibility founded upon a very strong ethical system drawn
and designed as a national philosophy; a transcultural system inspired
by the strength and universality of all religious and non-religious
philosophies – not just based on Islam that has its limitations and
cultural biases, albeit insisted upon and imposed onto many as a
complete and all-encompassing, all-hegemonising political, social and
existential philosophy.’ I could not agree more.
Guided by such a principled philosophy, Azly Rahman makes a sound
plea to Malaysians (and others): ‘Let us work together on a common
ground—for the common good’. It is a clarion call to Malaysians to get
out of their comfort zone and apathy and to join the movement for a
better Malaysia where bigotry, racism and religious extremism are kept
in check and where peace, harmony, intercultural understanding are
reinstated and reinforced as part and parcel of everyday life.
There is much offered in this book that can constitute what I would boldly label as the ‘Malaysian Manifesto’.
Alberto Gomes, Ph.D
Emeritus Professor, La Trobe University, Melbourne
Global Director, Dialogue, Empathic Engagement and Peacebuilding (DEEP) Network
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