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Malaysia
This Week in AsiaOpinion
Joseph Sipalan

My TakeMalaysia’s outrage over cultural sensibilities is the new normal in politics

  • Calls for several Chinese ‘new villages’ to get Unesco status and the designation of a herbal pork soup as a heritage dish have sparked a cultural clash
  • Politicians have jumped on these issues by expressing outrage over a perceived threat to the rights of the Malay majority

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Bak kut teh soup. Photo: Handout

There is a growing tendency among Malaysians to express outrage over things that hurt their cultural sensibilities.

If it is not about food, it is something else that gets the goat of politicians claiming to uphold the cultural purity of those who they say need protecting.

In this case, it is a recent proposal by the government to secure Unesco heritage status for several Chinese settlements that were set up by the British colonial authorities in then Malaya.
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The plan, announced last month by Local Government and Housing Minister Nga Kor Ming, is to recognise the cultural significance of the Chinese “new villages”.

The backlash was almost immediate.

Some academics called it an exercise in historical revisionism that paved the way for equal rights for non-Malay minorities over land ownership, something that Malay nationalists say is their exclusive right as the country’s original landowners.
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