Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Preface
- The Editors
- The Contributors
- REGIONAL AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
- COUNTRY PERSPECTIVES
- Brunei Darussalam
- China
- Indonesia
- Japan
- Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam
- Korea
- Malaysia
- 19 A Critical Review of Indian Economic Performance and Priorities for Action
- 20 Politics of Indian Representation in Malaysia
- 21 Indians in Malaysia: Towards Vision 2020
- 22 Tamil School Education in Malaysia: Challenges and Prospects in the New Millennium
- 23 Socio-economic Self-help among Indians in Malaysia
- 24 Ethnic Clashes, Squatters and Historicity in Malaysia
- 25 Indian Hindu Resurgence in Malaysia
- Myanmar
- Philippines
- Singapore
- Taiwan
- Thailand
- Index
21 - Indians in Malaysia: Towards Vision 2020
from Malaysia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Preface
- The Editors
- The Contributors
- REGIONAL AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
- COUNTRY PERSPECTIVES
- Brunei Darussalam
- China
- Indonesia
- Japan
- Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam
- Korea
- Malaysia
- 19 A Critical Review of Indian Economic Performance and Priorities for Action
- 20 Politics of Indian Representation in Malaysia
- 21 Indians in Malaysia: Towards Vision 2020
- 22 Tamil School Education in Malaysia: Challenges and Prospects in the New Millennium
- 23 Socio-economic Self-help among Indians in Malaysia
- 24 Ethnic Clashes, Squatters and Historicity in Malaysia
- 25 Indian Hindu Resurgence in Malaysia
- Myanmar
- Philippines
- Singapore
- Taiwan
- Thailand
- Index
Summary
We tapped the rubber that beautified your homes,
We built the roads that produced your bountiful economy,
And now we live in non-descript squalor.
You pass us by and snigger at our sub-human status,
Not in the least realizing how our blood, sweat and tears,
Contributed to the comfort and the opulence,
You now enjoy!
Malaysia saw robust economic growth from the late 1980s, bringing general prosperity and a new confidence among large sections of the populace. Divisive debates over lingering ethnic issues were submerged in the “feelgood” environment of the 1990s. A series of mega-projects took shape after the federal government launched its thirty-year national development blueprint in 1991 to attain developed nation status by the year 2020. Dubbed Vision 2020, it envisioned a nation that is “fully developed in terms of national unity and social cohesion, economy, social justice, political stability, system of government, quality of life, social and spiritual values, national pride and confidence”.
Paradoxically, the socio-economic situation of Indian Malaysians deteriorated during this period with many in the community increasingly feeling angry, neglected and victimized, a theme articulated by Andrew Willford in chapter 24 in this volume. Academic and journalistic3 writings began to refer to the Indians as the “disenfranchised”, the “marginalized”, the “new underclass” or the “forgotten community” in Malaysia and the popular media began to stereotype them as violent criminals and gangsters.
By the turn of the twenty-first century, Vision 2020's goal of creating “a matured, liberal and tolerant society in which all Malaysians are free to practise and profess their customs, cultures and religious beliefs and yet feel that they belong to one nation” appears to have gone awry. In March 2001, ethnic violence broke out in southern Petaling Jaya. Ethnic and religious tensions have resurfaced with greater intensity in the last two years.
This chapter looks at developments in the Indian Malaysian community since the 1980s, the factors that led to its further marginalization and the new challenges it faces with “creeping Islamization”.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Rising India and Indian Communities in East Asia , pp. 375 - 398Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2008