HISTORY OF CHINESE & INDIANS IN MALAYSIA
As stated by Raja Petra Kamarudin (RPK)
A confusion has erupted due to ignorance.
It has been stated that the Indians came here as beggars and the
Chinese as prostitutes. Actually, if you were to really study Malayan
and Malaysian history over the last 500 years or so, you will find that
this country’s history is not just about beggars and prostitutes. It is
about much more than that.
Malayan history has to be dissected
into many periods. And each of these periods saw immigration involving
almost all the races in Malaysia, save the Orang Asli (the Original
People). In New Zealand, these Orang Asli would be the Maoris and in
Australia the Aborigines. Therefore, anyone who is neither a Maori nor
an Aborigine is a ‘pendatang’ or immigrant.
THE ARABS IN MALAYSIA
The Arabs and the Indians (Muslims from
Gujarat) came to Malaya more than 500 years ago as traders and
merchants. These were the people who brought Islam to this country. At
that time, the locals were mostly Hindus while those from Negeri
Sembilan were Buddhists, plus many who worshipped trees, the sea,
rivers, mountains and whatnot. The coming of the Arab and Indian
merchants exposed the locals to Islam.
In those days, the people followed
their Rulers. Therefore, when the Rulers converted to Islam the people
followed – although they may not have believed in Islam or understood
the religion. In fact, many till today still do not understand Islam
after more than 500 years.
THE CHINESE IN MALAYSIA
Then along came the Chinese and many were
actually Muslims as well. Islam first reached China around 100 years
after Prophet Muhammad. This means Islam had ‘migrated’ to China about
1,300 to 1,400 years ago, 800 to 900 years earlier than Islam in
Malaysia. Of course, in the northern states bordering Thailand it was
earlier than that. (Refer to the Batu Bersurat discovered in Kuala
Berang in Terengganu).
Is it not ironical that Malays call
Chinese Muslims ‘mualaf’ when the Chinese were Muslims almost 1,000
years before the Malays even heard of Islam?
Okay, now take my family as an
example. The Selangor Sultanate was founded in 1745. The first Sultan,
Raja Lumu, migrated here from the Riau islands in Indonesia. By then, of
course, the Arabs, Indians and Chinese had already been here 200 to 300
years, some even longer.
But these Arabs, Indians and Chinese were
traders and merchants, not warriors or fighters, whereas the Bugis from
Riau only knew one occupation – fighting and plundering. In short, they
were pirates, which was a noble profession back in those days where
even Queen Elizabeth the First knighted those English pirates who
plundered Spanish ships.
In fact, the Bugis came here because of a
sort of civil war in their home country. There was a fight over a girl
and the son of the local Ruler was killed in that fight. So the
offending party was exiled and had to leave Riau. And that was when they
came here in the 1700s and founded the Selangor Sultanate.
Do not members of the Selangor Royal
Family fighting with their Ruler and going into exile sound very
familiar to you? Yes, 300 years ago this was the ‘tradition’ and still
is in my case.
Invariably, the Bugis, being
fighters, took Selangor as their territory by the sheer force of its
‘army’. None of the traders, who although were here earlier, would dare
resist the Bugis who enjoyed killing (some Bugis still do today, as you
may well be aware). But Selangor was under Perak patronage.
So Raja Lumu had to make a trip to
Lumut in Perak to get crowned as the First Sultan by the then 17th or so
Sultan of Perak. (Can’t remember if it was the 15th or 17th but it was
around that). And he took the name of Sultan Salehuddin Shah.
Selangor eventually grew in
prosperity. Actually, tin had already been discovered even before Raja
Lumu became Sultan in 1745. And it was the Chinese who were working the
tin mines. But now, since Selangor had a ‘government’, all the land in
Selangor became ‘state property’. And therefore the Chinese had to get
permission from the Sultan before they could mine for tin.
Around 100 years later, only when
Sultan Abdul Samad took over as the Fourth Sultan of Selangor in 1859
(he was born in 1804) did they properly organize the tin industry. New
areas were opened up in Ampang, Rawang, Kajang, and whatnot. And of
course, all these tin mines were owned by the Sultan and members of his
family — brothers, sons, nephews, etc.
The Malays, however, did not want to
work those mines. Conditions were hard and diseases wiped out entire
communities. Those who survived these brutal conditions were the
exception rather than the rule. So they needed people who were desperate
enough to work those tin mines and were prepared to take the risk and
probably lose the ‘gamble’.
And who else to talk to if not the Chinese who had already been working those mines for hundreds of years?
So members of the Selangor Royal
Family went into ‘joint venture’ with the Chinese, just like they did in
Perak, another rich tin state. The Malay Royals would ‘arrange’ for the
tin concessions and the Chinese would provide the labour force to work
those concessions. In a way, you could say that the Selangor Royal
Family were the first to ‘invent’ the Ali Baba system back in the 1800s,
long before the New Economic Policy in 1970.
Anyway, to reach Ampang and those
other surrounding rich tin areas, they had to travel up the Klang River.
Raja Abdullah and Yap Ah Loy led the first expedition and they landed
on the site where the Gombak River and Kelang River meet. The place
where they landed is the site of the famous Masjid Jamek in Kuala
Lumpur.
From there they marched overland through
the jungle into Ampang. And thereafter Kuala Lumpur was never the same
again. It prospered and continued to prosper over more than 200 years
from the 1800s.
Yap Ah Loy bought up a lot of land in
Kuala Lumpur and built his business empire. He opened bars, brothels
and all sorts of businesses, legal as well as illegal (illegal by
today’s standards though). Even the British Colonial ‘masters’ would
patronise Yap Ah Loy’s brothels to sample the latest ‘China Dolls’
brought in from the mainland.
Of course, the normal customers would
have to pay for these vices. The British masters, however, could enjoy
all these services for free. Yes, even back in the 1800s the Chinese
businessmen were already bribing the government officials.
Now, while Yap Ah Loy has been
entered into the history books as the ‘Founder of Kuala Lumpur’, Raja
Abdullah is never mentioned. The only thing associated with Raja
Abdullah is that road in Kampong Baru that carries his name. Yap Ah Loy
may have been the capitalist who opened up Kuala Lumpur.
But he was only able to do so because he had a ‘sleeping’ partner, Raja Abdullah, who gave him all this land to develop.
Okay, that is the Chinese story. So,
yes, some did come here as prostitutes working for Yap Ah Loy. But that
was incidental. Whenever frontier land is opened up the girls servicing
these frontier-men follow – like in the Wild West of America. Would you
say that the White immigrants to America were all prostitutes?
THE INDIANS IN MALAYSIA
Now, over to the Indians. As I said, the
Indian (and Arab) traders and merchants first came here more than 500
years ago and even brought Islam to this country. But the ‘other’
Indians, the workers, came at about the time that Yap Ah Loy and Raja
Abdullah were turning Kuala Lumpur into a thriving metropolis.
At that time, the British planters
were in Ceylon (Sri Lanka today) growing cocoa. Then a plant disease
spread throughout the island and all the trees died. But this disease
not only killed all the trees but contaminated the land as well. This
means the land was now useless and it was not a matter of just
replanting.
Then the British looked at Malaya and
decided that the conditions (land, climate, etc.) in Malaya were the
same as in Ceylon. So they relocated their cocoa estates to Malaya. But
there was no way they could get the Malays to work these cocoa estates.
Furthermore, the Ceylonese workers were well trained and had been doing
this work for years.
So, in the mid-1800s, the British
brought the now unemployed Ceylonese cocoa workers to this country to
work the Malayan cocoa plantations.
Then
disaster struck. Brazil over-planted cocoa and this triggered a
worldwide glut. It was no longer economical to plant cocoa. The price
you would fetch for your cocoa was lower than your production cost. The
British had no choice but to close down the cocoa plantations.
Around that time, the British, who
had mischievously smuggled rubber seeds out of Brazil (which was a crime
then), successfully grew rubber trees in the Kew Gardens in London.
They also did some research and discovered a better way of planting
rubber trees where the trees would give a better yield compared to the
trees in Brazil. Rubber planting in Brazil was haphazard and not
properly organized.
Since Malaya had to close down all
its cocoa plantations and it now had idle plantation land and surplus
Ceylonese workers, the British planters decided to switch over to
rubber. And because the British took advantage of research and
technology, the Malayan rubber trees were more productive and
profitable. Eventually, Malaya dislodged Brazil as the top rubber
producer in the world.
So,
from the mid-1800s to around 1920, Indians and Chinese came to Malaya
in great numbers. This was more or less the second wave of mass
migration. And it was for economic reasons and to provide the labour for
jobs that the Malays would never do. But there were earlier and other
migrations as well.
For example, around the late 1800s
and early 1900s, the British set up English medium schools for Malays.
One such school, the Malay College Kuala Kangsar, was a school exclusive
for sons of Royalty and the Malay elite. Invariably, they needed
schoolteachers who were proficient in the English language. And India
offered a good source of English medium schoolteachers (Malays could not
speak English yet at that time).
On
the commercial side, there were many Indian businesses, workers and
whatnot. But there was no way they could qualify for loans from British
owned banks. So the Indians from the Chettiar community came here to set
up money-lending businesses to service their community.
When the Malayan rail network was
being developed, where else to get the workers if not from the country
with the largest railway in the world, India?
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