Rabu, 2 Januari 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Fructose drinks may fuel cravings

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 05:45 PM PST

YALE, Jan 3 — A study using imaging tests finds that fructose, a sugar saturating many Western diets, triggers brain changes that may lead to overeating.

Innocuous, but watch what you drink. © shutterstock

Scientists from Yale University in the US used magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, scans to track brain activity in 20 normal-weight subjects before and after they drank drinks containing glucose or fructose, a "fruit sugar".

After drinking fructose-laden drinks, subjects' brains did not register the sensation of being full or satisfied, which could lead to overeating, said the researchers.

After subjects drank a glucose beverage, scans revealed that activity in parts of the brain associated with desire for food, motivation and reward processing were switched off or suppressed.

The findings were published yesterday online in the journal JAMA.

Given that the study was small, more research needs to be done, and researchers are testing whether glucose and fructose affect obese people differently from people of normal weight.

Still, experts advise that it's a good idea to be cautious in consuming sucrose and similar food. Cook more at home, and drink sugar-sweetened sodas and drinks sparingly.

The American Heart Association recommends that men and women respectively take no more than 150 and 100 calories daily from added sugar.

According to the Mayo Clinic, that is about six teaspoons of added sugar for women and nine teaspoons for men. — AFP/Relaxnews


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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Coach Gillot extends Bordeaux contract until 2015

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 07:53 AM PST

Bordeaux coach Francis Gillot. — AFP pic

BORDEAUX, Jan 2 — Coach Francis Gillot has signed for two more years with Girondins Bordeaux until 2015, the Ligue 1 club said today.

Gillot joined Bordeaux in 2011 and has helped the 2009 French champions recover after two disappointing seasons, leading them to a European qualifying place in his first year in charge.

"Francis and I are pleased to announce that we have found an agreement to extend his contract for two years," Bordeaux president Jean-Louis Triaud told a news conference.

"Francis managed to regenerate the squad and his personality fits this club," he added.

The 52-year-old Gillot, linked with several French clubs in as his contract was due to end next June, said the decision was easy to take.

"I did not hesitate. When the owner, the president and the management trust you, when the fans want you to stay, there's nothing to say," Gillot said.

Bordeaux are seventh in the Ligue 1 standings on 29 points at the halfway point of the 38-game season, nine behind leaders Paris St Germain.

They have qualified for the Europa League last 32 where they will face Dynamo Kiev.

President Triaud also said the club has submitted a long-term contract offer to striker Yoan Gouffran, whose current deal ends in June.

Gouffran, who scored 14 league goals last season, has netted seven in 18 appearances this term. — Reuters

Contract talks with Real not important, says Ronaldo

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 07:50 AM PST

Portugal forward Cristiano Ronaldo. — AFP pic

MADRID, Jan 2 — Cristiano Ronaldo is to avoid public discussions of a possible contract renewal with Real Madrid and plans to focus instead on winning matches, he said today.

"The issue has already been talked about," the Portugal forward told a news conference when asked about his contract situation after training.

"I won't talk about my renewal any more," added the 27-year-old whose deal with La Liga champions Real runs until June 2015. "It's not the most important thing, the important thing is to win out next games.

"We are fighting for La Liga, the King's Cup and the Champions League - the important thing is to be united. I am feeling very comfortable at the club and I hope to give the best of me for this shirt as I always have done."

Ronaldo, the world's most expensive player, raised eyebrows earlier this season when he said he was feeling sad "for professional reasons" and that Real officials knew why.

He did not explain further, leading to media speculation he was unhappy with the terms of his deal and wanted more money.

Some reports have suggested Ronaldo might be lured to a big-spending club like Paris St Germain or that he may return to Manchester United who sold him to Real for a record fee of 94 million euros (RM376 million) in 2009.

Real play United in the last 16 of the Champions League, with the first leg in Madrid on February 13 and the return in Manchester on March 5.

"I have feelings of strong friendship, a lot of warmth," Ronaldo said of the tie. "It's a team that had a big influence on my career.

"The people know me well. I have a lot of friends, people who have a place in my heart - but now I defend the colours of Real Madrid. The feeling will be a slightly sad one but I want to win and score, give my absolute best." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Paparazzo killed on freeway after photographing Justin Bieber car

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 07:12 AM PST

Justin Bieber performs at the Jingle Ball 2012 in Atlanta, Georgia December 12, 2012. — Reuters pic

LOS ANGELES, Jan 2 — A celebrity photographer was struck and killed by a car on a Los Angeles highway yesterday after snapping photographs of a Ferrari registered to pop star Justin Bieber, police said.

Bieber wasn't in his car, which had been pulled over by California Highway Patrol officers on Interstate 405 for suspected speeding, Los Angeles Police Department Officer Cleon Joseph said today.

Highway patrol officers saw the 29-year-old paparazzo taking photographs of the scene yesterday evening and ordered him to return to his car for safety reasons, Joseph said.

The photographer, whose name was not released, refused to leave. After officers repeated their order, he was struck while trying to cross four lanes of traffic, Joseph said.

Charges were unlikely to be filed against the driver who struck the photographer, the officer said.

Bieber was stopped by police for speeding on a Los Angeles freeway last July. He told officers he was being hounded by paparazzi at the time.

Prosecutors charged a celebrity photographer under a California law that criminalizes dangerous driving when taking photos commercially, but a judge later dismissed those counts. — Reuters

Bond film ‘Skyfall’ sets £100m record in Britain

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 06:39 AM PST

Cast member Daniel Craig (C) takes a photograph of himself with fans as he arrives for the German premiere for the film 'Skyfall' in Berlin October 30, 2012. — Reuters pic

LONDON, Jan 2 — The latest James Bond film "Skyfall" has become the first movie ever to take £100 million (RM495 million) at the British box office, it was announced Monday.

The 23rd official Bond film surpassed the landmark, equivalent of US$162 million (RM491 million), after becoming the highest grossing film ever in Britain earlier this month when it overtook the £94 million generated by "Avatar".

"Skyfall" achieved the figure in just 40 days, while "Avatar" (2009) took 11 months to amass its total.

Globally, the new Bond film has taken more than US$1 billion.

It is a mark of the franchise's continuing appeal as it celebrates its 50th anniversary.

Daniel Craig's third appearance as British secret agent Bond is still on general release more than two months after it first hit British cinemas.

The movie sees Bond battling with villain Raoul Silva (played by Javier Bardem), who aims to take revenge on his former boss M (Judi Dench). — AFP/Relaxnews

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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A few extra kilos may extend your life, says study

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 07:16 AM PST

NEW YORK, Jan 2 — As the New Year brings a renewed vigour to drop those extra kilos, a new study suggests that carrying around extra weight may not be bad for your health at all and may even extend your life.

A new analysis published online yesterday in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that people classified as overweight, with a body mass index (BMI) of 25 to 29.9, lived a bit longer than those who were at a so-called normal weight. A reduction in the risk of death from all causes was about six per cent lower for people who were overweight, noted the researchers.

Researchers looked at data from 97 studies involving nearly three million people in the US, Canada, Europe, Australia, China, Taiwan, Japan, Brazil, India, and Mexico. 

In the research, people who were obese, with a BMI of 35 or more, lived shorter lives on average than those with a normal weight, or a BMI of 18.5 to 24.9. 

While Katherine M. Flegal, an epidemiologist with the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention in the US, and her team controlled for factors such as smoking — which can keep people thin but lead to an early death — they say their study merely finds an association between weight and life span. 

In an editorial published in the same journal, Steven B. Heymsfield, MD, executive director of the Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, Lousiana, cites a number of possibilities as to why extra weight could improve your health. 

For one, prior research has found that people who are overweight are treated more aggressively for health issues such as high blood pressure or high cholesterol than people who are at a normal weight. Additionally, BMI is not a perfect indicator of fat in the body, he adds. Also, heavier people are not as prone to osteoporosis and have more padding to protect their bones should they take a spill, reducing their risk of a life-endangering hip fracture, for example. — AFP/Relaxnews 

Wanted: Diamond polishers in Israel, piety not a problem

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 06:57 AM PST

A British diamond dealer inspects a raw diamond on the trading floor of Israel's diamond exchange in Ramat Gan near Tel Aviv October 30, 2012. — Reuters pic

RAMAT GAN (Israel), Jan 2 — Diamond manufacturing is a dwindling trade in Israel. The country has one of the world's hottest diamond exchanges, but polishers and cutters of the precious stones have been replaced by cheaper workers in newer hubs like India and China.

Israel wants to bring them back. To do so, it plans on recruiting a legion of ultra-Orthodox Jews, who because of their dedication to prayer and study, have been unable or unwilling to join the work force, putting a heavy weight on the economy.

The job of a diamond polisher, however, is unique, said Bumi Traub, president of the Israel Diamond Manufacturers Association. It need not disrupt their pious lifestyle.

"The profession is fitting. You deal with the rock, and if you need to go pray, no one will bother you," he said.

The door to Traub's office requires a fingerprint scan. Security is tight in the four-building exchange where annual turnover of trading reaches US$25 billion (RM75 billion) each year.

About a third of rough diamonds produced in the world each year pass through the Jewish state and diamonds account for more than a fifth of the country's industrial exports.

It was a natural sector to develop when Israel was founded 64 years ago, since the small stones have been choice merchandise for generations of Jews who had to quickly flee from riots and persecution.

The plan to revitalise manufacturing will cost millions of dollars and the diamond sector, for the first time, is turning to the government for help. The government, eager to get as many ultra-Orthodox working as possible, is on board.

Ultra-Orthodox Jews work in the trading room of Israel's diamond exchange in Ramat Gan. — Reuters pic

Industry troubles

The global financial crisis has taken a toll on the diamond trade, and Israel was not spared. Turnover was nearly halved at the outset in 2009, though in 2011 it returned to pre-crisis levels. A smaller drop is again expected for 2012.

The damage has been moderate compared to other major hubs such as India, according to Yair Sahar, president of the Israel Diamond Exchange.

"In other centres the leverage was tremendous, as opposed to here where we were much more conservative," he said, referring to the low level of debt among Israeli firms. "We entered the crisis more prepared, so to speak."

There have, however, been other problems.

The price for raw material has risen faster than that of the final product, eating away at profits. And a money laundering and tax evasion scandal at the start of 2012 scared away some customers. The investigations have ended and, so far, no one has been charged.

The diamond-trading floor in Ramat Gan, a suburb of Tel Aviv, is the biggest in the world. Armed guards escort non-members and on one wall are mug shots of problematic dealers whom customers are urged to avoid.

Diamonds change hands freely across the rows of long dark tables that line the hall. On one side a seller could be local. A buyer across the way could represent some anonymous client on a different continent.

They scrutinise the stones under a magnifying glass, weigh them on sensitive scales and when a deal is reached they say "mazal ubracha", a Hebrew phrase recognised in centres around the world meaning "luck and blessings".

In 2011, rough diamond imports to Israel topped US$4.4 billion and US$7.2 billion in polished diamonds were exported. Every second diamond sold in the United States, according to value, came from Israel.

But only US$1.5 billion of the stones were cut and polished locally, a much lower percentage than a decade ago. The rest were sent abroad to foreign firms or Israeli-owned factories.

"Once, everyone who sat in this room was a manufacturer," billionaire dealer Lev Leviev said at the opening of a Gemological Institute of America (GIA) laboratory in September. "There was not a diamantaire who was not a manufacturer, and over the years we lost it."

Salaries were just too cheap to compete with, he said, first in India, the world's biggest importer of rough diamonds, and later in China.

Israel has subsisted on larger, high-end stones whose owners pay more to have them manufactured close to home. But industry leaders hope to change that, in part because polishers in developing countries are demanding more money.

"I think we are there, more or less. With rocks of one carat plus, I think we are in a place where the (wage) gap doesn't justify running to manufacture abroad," said Sahar.

The GIA decision to open its lab in Israel was a first step. Manufacturers can now have their diamonds graded and evaluated in Israel rather than sending them to the United States.

"It's critical for the growth, for the international branding of the export business, and we think that we're a good partner to help the manufacturing grow," GIA President and CEO Donna Baker told Reuters when the lab opened.

By cutting costs and allowing increased turnover, it will add between US$30 million and US$50 million a year to the industry.

Diamonds are seen on the trading floor of Israel's diamond exchange in Ramat Gan. — Reuters pic

New blood

At the peak of manufacturing in the 1980s, there were 20,000 people cutting and polishing diamonds in Israel. That has dropped to about 2,000.

"There is no new manpower. Most polishers are 50 years old and up," said Roy Fuchs, who owns a factory a few minutes walk from the exchange. "If they don't invest and bring in new blood, there simply won't be manufacturing."

To make it happen, the industry realises it needs help, and for the first time, it is looking for assistance.

"It's not easy. You need cooperation with the government," said Udi Sheintal, the Israel Diamond Institute's managing director. "Here in the middle of Ramat Gan, you don't get incentives. There are only incentives for certain populations, like the haredi."

The term haredi, which in Hebrew means "those who tremble before God", refers to people who strictly observe Jewish law. They dress in traditional black outfits, the men do not shave their beards and they spend their days in study and prayer.

Some 8-10 per cent of Israelis are haredi. For the most part they live in insular communities, are exempt from mandatory military service and, according to the Bank of Israel, less than half of ultra-Orthodox men work.

The issue has created a rift in the mostly secular Israeli society and put a strain on an otherwise robust economy. The government has already earmarked US$200 million over the next five years to encourage haredi integration in the work force.

Many in the new generation of ultra-Orthodox are open to the idea of getting jobs. The key is finding one that fits, said Bezalel Cohen, 38, who has worked for years to promote employment among his fellow haredis.

"The diamond industry's initiative (to hire ultra-Orthodox)has potential to really succeed," he said. "As long as the pay and training is proper, it should take off."

Aside from helping to pay the salaries for newly hired haredis, the government will offer grants to small exporters and marketing support.

An Israeli worker checks a yellow diamond as it is polished.— Reuters pic

Employment plan

The Trade Ministry's diamond controller, Shmuel Mordechai, said the government backs the idea and has funded similar programs in other financial sectors. It would have helped even earlier, he said, but the diamond industry was never interested.

"They lived in their bubble, they said, 'Don't bother us, don't help us'. In recent years, because of difficulties in the industry and because we opened up our tools to them, they understand," he said.

One of the more advanced plans Mordechai described is that of an independent service plant where dealers bring their rough diamonds. Such a plant would cost US$1-US$2 million and employ 30-40 workers. The government will help recruit the ultra-Orthodox.

"In any plant they set up here and bring employment, we will give help with salaries and other incentives," he said. "If two or three are set up, it will catch on. If the first one succeeds, others will follow."

Traub, from the manufacturer's association, intends to create dozens of new private factories. He has already spoken to leading rabbis in the community to win their support.

"I'm speaking of starting with hundreds and going to thousands of haredi workers," he said. "Manufacturing attracts clients. Barring a global crisis, I think we will grow at least 10 percent a year in export." — Reuters 

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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views

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Coach Gillot extends Bordeaux contract until 2015

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 07:53 AM PST

Bordeaux coach Francis Gillot. — AFP pic

BORDEAUX, Jan 2 — Coach Francis Gillot has signed for two more years with Girondins Bordeaux until 2015, the Ligue 1 club said today.

Gillot joined Bordeaux in 2011 and has helped the 2009 French champions recover after two disappointing seasons, leading them to a European qualifying place in his first year in charge.

"Francis and I are pleased to announce that we have found an agreement to extend his contract for two years," Bordeaux president Jean-Louis Triaud told a news conference.

"Francis managed to regenerate the squad and his personality fits this club," he added.

The 52-year-old Gillot, linked with several French clubs in as his contract was due to end next June, said the decision was easy to take.

"I did not hesitate. When the owner, the president and the management trust you, when the fans want you to stay, there's nothing to say," Gillot said.

Bordeaux are seventh in the Ligue 1 standings on 29 points at the halfway point of the 38-game season, nine behind leaders Paris St Germain.

They have qualified for the Europa League last 32 where they will face Dynamo Kiev.

President Triaud also said the club has submitted a long-term contract offer to striker Yoan Gouffran, whose current deal ends in June.

Gouffran, who scored 14 league goals last season, has netted seven in 18 appearances this term. — Reuters

Contract talks with Real not important, says Ronaldo

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 07:50 AM PST

Portugal forward Cristiano Ronaldo. — AFP pic

MADRID, Jan 2 — Cristiano Ronaldo is to avoid public discussions of a possible contract renewal with Real Madrid and plans to focus instead on winning matches, he said today.

"The issue has already been talked about," the Portugal forward told a news conference when asked about his contract situation after training.

"I won't talk about my renewal any more," added the 27-year-old whose deal with La Liga champions Real runs until June 2015. "It's not the most important thing, the important thing is to win out next games.

"We are fighting for La Liga, the King's Cup and the Champions League - the important thing is to be united. I am feeling very comfortable at the club and I hope to give the best of me for this shirt as I always have done."

Ronaldo, the world's most expensive player, raised eyebrows earlier this season when he said he was feeling sad "for professional reasons" and that Real officials knew why.

He did not explain further, leading to media speculation he was unhappy with the terms of his deal and wanted more money.

Some reports have suggested Ronaldo might be lured to a big-spending club like Paris St Germain or that he may return to Manchester United who sold him to Real for a record fee of 94 million euros (RM376 million) in 2009.

Real play United in the last 16 of the Champions League, with the first leg in Madrid on February 13 and the return in Manchester on March 5.

"I have feelings of strong friendship, a lot of warmth," Ronaldo said of the tie. "It's a team that had a big influence on my career.

"The people know me well. I have a lot of friends, people who have a place in my heart - but now I defend the colours of Real Madrid. The feeling will be a slightly sad one but I want to win and score, give my absolute best." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books


Life for beginners

Posted: 01 Jan 2013 05:52 PM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 2 – "It is true that those we meet can change us, sometimes so profoundly that we are not the same afterwards."—Yann Martel, Life of Pi.

Anything could happen.

You learn early, if you are fortunate, this simple truth. You prepare yourself for Life by realising there is no possible preparation; you learn to accept uncertainty.

Try telling this to a 23-year-old attempting to backpack alone all over Europe with very little money and no itinerary though. Ten years ago, this was our hero.

He was convinced that there was a Master Plan for him, that Life had meant him for greater things. Yes, absolutely so.

That was until he realised he was about to miss the ferry from Stranraer to Belfast. You see, the train he arrived on was half an hour late.

The Scotsman whom he had stopped outside a 7Eleven to ask for directions cheerfully shared this bit of Gaelic rail lore with him. Was the Master Plan about to be revealed as nothing more than an aimless scam?

The boy's look of dismay was interrupted by the Scotsman calling up his wife looking for parking nearby: "Honey? Can you take this kid I found to the ferry?"

The intrepid traveller in question was me, of course, and I was about to get rescued.

"If you stumble about believability, what are you living for? Love is hard to believe, ask any lover. Life is hard to believe, ask any scientist. God is hard to believe, ask any believer. What is your problem with hard to believe?" ― Yann Martel, Life of Pi.

Five minutes later, I was in a Volkswagen Beetle hurtling for the ferry port. Small talk ensued.

"Malaysia? Isn't that near Bali?" the Scotsman's wife asked.

"Sort of. Indonesia and Malaysia are neighbours," I said.

"Terrible isn't it, the bombing? Those terrorists…"

What could I say? This was a year after 9/11 and everyone was still a little paranoid. What could I say?

I was saved by my Good Samaritan driver, who continued without waiting for my reply: "My niece Barbara, she was backpacking, just like you are, in Bali. She flew back three days before the Kuta attack. God bless her."

I nodded, glad I wasn't going to get kicked out of the car for sins unknown. (You see, I wasn't exactly immune to paranoia myself.)

"Barbara plans to go back, you know. She loves the islands, she said. Where else should she go, you reckon? Does Malaysia have any nice islands? I bet it does."

I reached my ferry with barely any minutes to spare. As I moved over the waters towards Northern Ireland, the only thing on my mind wasn't relief at not wasting my ticket but astonishment at the kindness and generosity of two complete strangers.

"It is also good to love: because love is difficult. For one human being to love another human being: that is perhaps the most difficult task that has been entrusted to us, the ultimate task, the final test and proof, the work for which all other work is merely preparation." ― Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet.

I am walking to one of my favourite cafés and, truth be told, I am a little grumpy.

I have had a wisdom tooth removed yesterday and my gums are still sore. This also means no coffee for me, which, a decade since my last backpacking adventure, is a pretty big deal. I have gotten fatter and older; I am a spoiled 33-year-old expecting the world to be delivered to me on a silver platter.

Or at least this is what I tell myself in my worst moments of self-pity. It could well be the drugs my dental surgeon gave me working a little too well.

You wisely ignore me, my poor, dear overworked partner. You have been telling me to shut up since yesterday; which is what you usually do, but this time you had an excuse.

Doctor's orders to rest my jaws. More instructions: no food that is hot, spicy, fried, caffeinated, etc. This about covered anything remotely tasty, really.

While I continued groaning on the sofa, you made congee for me, with nuggets of minced pork and steamed eggs. You let it cool in a large bowl and reminded me to eat it before it got too cold.

My gums were still sore, of course, but I had never tasted anything more delicious, I swore.

You simply rolled your eyes but couldn't hide a smile.

"Do not seek the answers, which could not be given to you now, because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps then, someday far in the future, you will gradually, without even noticing it, live your way into the answer." ― Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet.

Today I am allowed out of the house though I'm pretty sure it's only an excuse for you to have some decent coffee. You caution me for the umpteenth time: no coffee. Sure, why not? Take all the fun out of life, why don't you?

But I couldn't hide my smile either; better to have you admonishing me than not.

We walk into the café and immediately we spot a few familiar faces. Friends! Hugs and kisses, a swift flurry of questions about my oral health, random topics of conversation: these are better than the stuff any pharmacist could give you.

Then more customers walk in. Strangers. Well, maybe not exactly strangers. One comes over to say hi; he's the baker who makes our favourite sweet potato cheesecake at another café. He's been busy and missing for months.

Another stranger drops by our table; a petite Japanese woman in classy threads. Good gosh, she's my yoga teacher – from a different lifetime almost. I tell her she looks ravishing.

More chatter, more happy smiles.

I forget about any pain. A friend from Singapore wryly observes, "What's with you? You seem to know everyone here. I don't know why any of us even like you."

Laughing, I fake a punch at him. A text message comes in from another good friend who was here earlier: "The soundtrack for today is Joy."

She's right. What a wonderful day. The thing I have learned, if I have learned anything at all, is that we cannot predict the future, only live in the present and celebrate what we have.

"The world isn't just the way it is. It is how we understand it, no? And in understanding something, we bring something to it, no? Doesn't that make life a story?" ― Yann Martel, Life of Pi.

I think about the two strangers who had been so kind to me once upon a time, and the lesson they taught me of always keeping an open heart and an open mind.

If you do, why, anything could happen.

Life of Pi, by Yann Martel (Knopf Canada, 2001)

Letters to a Young Poet, by Rainer Maria Rilke & translated by Stephen Mitchell (Vintage, 1986)

* Kenny is a beginner at Life, always experiencing and always learning. Read more of his stories.


From UFOs to ‘tsunami bomb’: New Zealand archive secrets revealed

Posted: 01 Jan 2013 03:18 PM PST

WELLINGTON, Jan 2 – A new book has revealed rare historical gems buried in New Zealand's national archives, including a bizarre WWII plan to create a "tsunami bomb" and military files detailing supposed UFO sightings.

Author Ray Waru said he wrote Secrets and Treasure to highlight the material publicly available at Archives New Zealand in Wellington — where almost 100m of shelf space is crammed with historical artefacts.

"It was totally overwhelming at the beginning," he told AFP.

"I knew I wanted to get in the important things, the Treaty of Waitangi (New Zealand's founding document), the Declaration of Independence, the women's suffrage petition, and a few other things.

"But once you start digging, one story leads onto another and I'd just follow my nose."

The suffrage petition Waru refers to contains 36,000 signatures and was dramatically unfurled on the floor of the New Zealand parliament in 1893 by supporters of women's right to vote.

Stretching for almost 300 metres, the petition, currently undergoing restoration, proved successful and led New Zealand, then a British colony, to become the first country in the world to grant women the vote later that year.

Alongside notable historical documents, such as a letter written by explorer captain James Cook before his final voyage, are curiosities like "Project Seal", a top-secret US-New Zealand attempt to create a doomsday device to rival the nuclear bomb.

The project was launched in June 1944 after a US naval officer noticed that blasting operations to clear coral reefs around Pacific islands sometimes produced a large wave, raising the possibility of creating a "tsunami bomb".

Explosive tests carried out in waters north of Auckland led scientists to conclude that the weapon was feasible and a series of 10 massive blasts offshore could create a 10-metre tsunami capable of inundating a small coastal city.

"It was absolutely astonishing," Waru said.

"First that anyone would come up with the idea of developing a weapon of mass destruction based on a tsunami... and also that New Zealand seems to have successfully developed it to the degree that it might have worked.

"I only came across it because they were still vetting the report, so there it was sitting on somebody's desk (in the archives)."

Waru said the project was shelved in early 1945, despite the success of initial, small-scale tests.

"If you put it in a James Bond movie it would be viewed as fantasy but it was a real thing," he said.

Among the other oddities in the archives are Defence Department records of hundreds of UFO sightings by members of the public, military personnel and commercial pilots, mostly involving moving lights in the sky.

Some of the accounts include drawings of flying saucers, descriptions of aliens wearing "pharaoh masks" and alleged examples of extra-terrestrial writing.

New Zealand's most famous close encounter was when a television crew recorded strange lights off the South Island town of Kaikoura in 1978.

However, in a disappointment for ET spotters, the military concluded the lights could be explained by natural phenomena such as lights from boats being reflected off clouds or an unusual view of the planet Venus.

Waru said it was seemingly humdrum documents, like school magazines from the early 1900s extolling the virtues of the British Empire, that provided a window into the attitudes of the past.

"There's masses of records and kilometres of important files but you realise pretty quickly that every piece of paper is related to an individual at some point in time," he said.

"So it gives the modern researcher a peek into the private lives of individuals, which I found interesting—divorce files from Dunedin, letters a young soldier wrote home to their parents." – AFP-Relaxnews


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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa


SUARAM kecam OCPD Dang Wangi ekoran satu lagi kes mati dalam tahanan

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 01:43 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 2 Jan — Badan bukan kerajaan SUARAM dalam satu kenyataan hari ini mengecam Ketua Balai Polis Daerah (OCPD) Dang Wangi Zainuddin Ahmad ekoran tiga kematian dalam tahanan daripada September hingga Disember tahun lepas.

Kematian terbaru K. Nagarajan, 32 pada 21 Disember 2012 merupakan yang ketiga di balai tersebut, sebelum ini dua lagi mangsa Chandran Perumalu, 47 dan Wong Tip Ping, 51 turut mengalami nasib serupa di balai sama.

"Balai polis Dang Wangi belum pun kering lagi darah ditangan tetapi sudah menambah satu lagi kematian dalam rekod, Nagarajanadalah mangsa yang terkini," kata jawatankuasa SUARAM, R Thevarajan hari ini.

Menurut Polis Diraja Malaysia (PDRM), Nagarajan didakwa mati setelah terjatuh di dalam lokap ketika ditahan di balai polis Dang Wangi.

Kumpulan tersebut juga menggesa satu inkuiri bebas dijalankan bagi menyiasat kematian mangsa terbaru tersebut.

"SUARAM sangat marah dan terkilan dengan kematian dalam tahanan yang masih berterusan. Sebagai menuntut keadilan, kami menggesa satu inkuiri bebas diadakan untuk meniyiasat.

Disamping itu, SUARAM juga mengecam Zainuddin sebagai seorang OCPD yang tidak bertanggungjawab memandangkan kematian kali ini adalah yang ketiga sejak beliau menggantikan Mohamad Zulkarnain Abd Rahman pada Ogos tahun lepas.

"Bagaimana beliau boleh membenarkan satu lagi kematian suspek semasa di bawah pengawasannya," soal Thevarajan kepada Zainuddin.

Menurut SUARAM, di bawah Undang-Undang Lokap 1958, seseorang pegawai polis yang bertugas perlu memastikan kesihatan tahanan dalam keadaan baik dan lokap yang didiaminya selesa, selain bertanggungjawab memastikan kesihatan tahanan dan lokap semasa waktu ditahan berada pada tahap baik.

Sekiranya Zainuddin gagal dan tidak mampu menjalankan tugas yang diamanahkan kepadanya serta mengurangkan kadar kematian dalam tahanan, SUARAM menggesa beliau untuk meletak jawatan.

Kumpulan tersebut juga menggesa penubuhan Suruhanjaya Bebas Aduan dan Salah Laku Polis (IPCMC) yang sudah lama mereka cadangkan kerana selagi inkuiri tersebut tidak diwajibkan, semua aduan daripada orang awam dan kumpulan bukan kerajaan tidak akan diendahkan.

Statistik PDRM menunjukkan daripada tahun 2000 hingga 2011, sebanak 147 orang telah mati di dalam tahanan.

Kematian dalam tahanan A Kugan di balai polis USJ pada 2009 dan Teoh Beng Hock semasa ditahan Suruhanjaya Pencegahan Rasuah Malaysia (SPRM) pada Julai 2009 antara kes mendapat perhatian utama rakyat Malaysia hingga kerajaan dikritik dengan hebat ekoran kematian tersebut.

Banglo Jamaludin Jarjis akan diroboh — Ikram

Posted: 02 Jan 2013 01:28 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 3 Jan — Banglo milik Anggota Parlimen Rompin Datuk Seri Dr Jamaluddin Jarjis yang terletak di kawasan tanah runtuh di Puncak Setiawangsa di sini akan dirobohkan 80 peratus.

Ketua Pegawai Operasi Institut Kerja Raya Malaysia (Ikram) Mohd Taufik Haron berkata keputusan itu susulan kemunculan tanda-tanda pergerakan tanah di kawasan berhampiran.

Langkah itu juga bagi memberi laluan kepada pembinaan zon penampan untuk mengukuhkan cerun bukit, katanya ketika ditemui pemberita di kawasan tanah runtuh tersebut, di sini hari ini.

Dalam kejadian pukul 10 malam pada Jumaat lepas itu, benteng konkrit yang dibina di lereng bukit setinggi 60 meter tersebut runtuh dan menjejaskan sebuah banglo serta mengancam keselamatan beberapa kediaman termasuk milik orang kenamaan.

Mengulas kerja merobohkan banglo yang rosak dalam kejadian itu, Mohd Taufik berkata setakat ini proses berkenaan sudah siap 80 peratus.

"Namun kita tidak menetapkan tarikh atau garis masa bila sebenarnya kerja- kerja merobohkan banglo itu siap sepenuhnya. Ia bergantung kepada beberapa faktor seperti cuaca dam pergerakan tanah demi keselamatan pekerja," katanya. — Bernama

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Drama pendidikan nasional

Posted: 01 Jan 2013 03:50 PM PST

2 JAN ― Syed Husein Alatas di dalam makalahnya "The meaning of progress in contemporary education" menyatakan: "The questions, which need to be highlighted, are "What has education done tu us?", "Are we happy with what we achieved?", "Is it going in the right direction?", "How has education helped us to improved ourselves?" and "How has it made us understand things better?" (UKM, 1999)

11 Disember yang lalu, laporan terperinci Trends in International Math and Science Study (TIMSS); sebuah badan mengukur pola pencapaian Matematik dan Sains untuk murid 10 dan 14 tahun untuk edisi laporan 2011 menyatakan kedudukan Malaysia untuk subjek Matematik jatuh dari tangga ke-20 pada 2007 ke tangga ke-26 pada 2011 manakala untuk subjek Sains dari tangga ke-21 pada 2007 ke tangga ke-32 untuk 2011.

Markah purata pencapaian dalam subjek Matematik di negara ini jatuh dari 474 pada 2007 ke 404 untuk tahun 2011 manakala markah purata pencapaian Sains pula jatuh lebih teruk  dari 471 pada 2007 ke 426 pada 2011 (semua laporan boleh dimuat turun melalui timssandpirls.bc.edu).

Laporan TIMMS 2011 ini juga mendedahkan "trend" kejatuhan kedudukan Malaysia untuk subjek Matematik iaitu 16 (1999), 10 (2003), 20 (2007), dan 26 (2011) sementara subjek Sains pula ialah 22 (1999), 20 (2003), 21 (2007), dan 32 (2011).

Begitu juga dengan "trend" kejatuhan markah purata bagi subjek Matematik iaitu 519 (1999), 508 (2003), 474(2007) ke 440 (2011); jatuh 79 mata sementara subjek Sains iaitu 492 (1999), 501 (2003), 471 (2007) ke 426 (2011); jatuh 66 mata dengan panilaian markah di bawah 500 dikira sebagai "under performance".

Menurut penganalisis politik Dr Ong Kian Ming di dalam blognya pada 14 Disember 2012 sebagai respon kepada laporan TIMSS 2011; Malaysia satu-satunya negara yang mengalami penuruan ketara di dalam semua markah terutama domain kognitif untuk Matematik dan Sains di samping Jordan dari 2007 ke 2011. Anehnya, laporan ini hadir 3 bulan selepas pelancaran Laporan Awal Pelan Pembangunan Pendidikan Malaysia (PPPM 2013-2025) pada 11 September 2013 yang dijalankan secara meriah, popular dan penuh publisiti.

Drama pendidikan nasional

Untuk pemerhati dan penganalisis pendidikan nasional, pengumuman PPPM 2013-2025 adalah sesuatu yang ditunggu-tunggu. Pelancaran besar-besaran pada 11 September 2012 di Dewan Plenari, Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre itu dilihat akan menjenamakan semula Pelan Induk Pendidikan Nasional (PIPP) 2006-2010 dan Pelan Pembangunan Pendidikan Nasional 2001-2010 yang dilihat tidak memberi kesan ketara terhadap sistem pendidikan nasional secara keseluruhan dalam masa 10 tahun kebelakangan ini.

Walaubagaimanapun, satu-satunya kejayaan PIPP 2006-2010 ialah peningkatan ketara pencapaian PMR dan SPM untuk 10 tahun kebelakangan ini. Berbeza dengan laporan TIMSS 2011, Ong Kian Ming dan Tony Pua di dalam laporan The Malaysian Insider bertarikh 14 Disember 2012 menyatakan Gred Purata Nasional (GPN) untuk peperiksaan PMR meningkat ketara untuk 5 tahun yang lalu iaitu 2.83 pada 2008, 2.78 pada 2009, 2.74 pada 2010 dan terbaru 2.71 pada 2011.

Lebih spesifik menurut mereka, bilangan pelajar yang mendapat A di dalam Matematik meningkat dari 26.7 peratus pada 2010 kepada 28.9 peratus pada 2011 manakala untuk subjek Sains pula meningkat dari 18.5 peratus dari 2010 kepada 21.7 peratus pada 2011. Untuk peperiksaan SPM pula, pencapaian 2011 dikatakan pencapaian terbaik dalam masa 5 tahun dengan peningkatan GPN meningkat dari 5.19 pada 2010 kepada 5.04 pada 2011.

Kehadiran penuh, implementasi dan pembelajaran eksplorasi

Di sebalik kemeriahan dunia pendidikan nasional pada tahun 2012, saya sempat menemubual beberapa Duta Teach For The Needs (TFTN) dan guru muda di seluruh negara melalui Facebook tentang pandangan mereka mengenai sesi persekolahan 2013, harapan terhadap anak murid dan wawasan diri mereka menjelang tahun mendatang.

Abdul Azim Hussain, 24, Duta TFTN dari SK Labang Sebauh, Bintulu menyatakan sesi 2013 akan menjadi lebih mencabar kerana murid-murid pedalaman kebanyakannya masih sukar untuk hadir ke sekolah dengan kehadiran penuh.

Selain itu beliau juga berharap agar anak muridnya akan lebih terbuka mindanya dengan mengikuti tusyen TFTN kerana mereka perlu mengikuti peredaran masa supaya mereka tidak tertinggal jauh serta tidak berada dalam tempurung dunia mereka sndiri.

Wawasan beliau untuk 2013 pula agar terus menjadi seorang Duta TFTN dan guru yang sentiasa memberi ilham dan inspirasi kepada anak murid serta menjadi seorang yang mampu memandu mereka seiring dengan perkembangan dunia yg semakin maju.

Mohd Zubir Amirudin, 24, Duta TFTN dari Sk Long Semadoh, Sarawak pula memberi pandangan sesi 2013 adalah tugas yang agak mencabar memandangkan KSSR dilaksanakan untuk tahap satu manakala KBSR masih perlu dilaksanakan untuk tahap dua.

Beliau yang akan mengajar kelas UPSR (Tahun 6) menyatakan bebanan semakin terasa apabila kerja perkeranian juga terpaksa dilakukan terhadap subjek Matematik Tahun 2 (KSSR) kendaliannya.

Beliau berharap pada 2013 agar dapat memanfaatkan masa sebaiknya dengan target peratusan kelulusan 100 peratus dan target pencapaian A sebanyak 25 peratus, selain akan meneruskan kelas TFTN seperti biasa untuk membantu memberi input tambahan kepada murid selepas sesi persekolahan tamat.

Sukarelawan TFTN dan pelajar tahun akhir IPGM Kampus Ipoh lulusan TESL dari Warwick University, Faiez Ali, 24 tahun pula menyatakan rasa teruja untuk melihat implementasi Kurikulum Standard Sekolah Menengah (KSSM).

Beliau yang akan memulakan sesi 2013 sebagai guru praktikal teruja untuk belajar gerak kerja di sekolah di samping berharap untuk menjadi "role model" kepada anak muridnya. Beliau mengingatkan keperluan untuk menimbulkan kesedaran tentang erti dan tujuan hidup dalam diri murid.

Guru muda di SJKC Balakong, Chew Kai Qing, 26 tahun pula menegaskan sesi 2013 penuh dengan cabaran kerana anak-anak muda sekarang mudah dipengaruhi oleh media massa dan rakan sebaya.

Selain itu, silibus pengajaran yang masih mengutamakan keputusan murid-murid akan menyebabkan murid hanya tahu menghafal sahaja. Beliau berharap muridnya dapat belajar secara konstruktif dimana pembelajaran berlaku secara "eksplorasi" dan berlaku secara automatik.

Adalah penting menurutnya proses pembelajaran secara sukarela dalam kelas dan berharap murid-murid dapat belajar untuk berdikari dengan mengutamakan iklim kelas yang harmoni.

Guru bahasa inggeris dari india dan wawasan pendidikan anak-anak Iban

Fathen Suriati , 25, bertugas di SMK Binjai, Chukai, Terengganu adalah salah seorang guru yang terkejut mendengar berita tentang pengambilan guru bahasa Inggeris dari India seperti yang diumumkan oleh Perdana Menteri, Datuk Seri Najib Razak pada 21 November 2012 yang lalu.

Lulusan TESOL dari New Zealand itu menyifatkan sesi 2013 sebagai sesi yang mencabar kerana di samping mengajar pelajar yang bakal menduduki PMR dan SPM, beliau juga adalah pelajar pasca-siswazah di Universiti Malaya. Mengharapkan pelajarnya lebih serius pada tahun ini, beliau ingin melihat dirinya pada tahun ini mengajar dan bukannya menjadi kerani serta ingin menjadi inspirasi kepada anak muridnya.

Sementara Hasmiyuhairi, 24, Duta TFTN yang mengajar di SK Bukit Mawang, Bintulu melihat sesi 2013 sebagai mengujakan memandangkan situasi pembelajaran dan pengajaran akan lebih mencabar akibat perbezaan bahasa dan budaya.

Oleh yang demikian beliau berharap pada tahun 2013 ini jurang dari segi budaya dan bahasa serta keserasian diantara dirinya dan anak-anak di Sk Bukit Mawang akan semakin mengecil bagi memudahkan penerapan ilmu secara langsung di dalam kelas mahupun di luar kelas. Bercakap tentang wawasan dirinya untuk tahun ini, beliau menjawab;

"Wawasan untuk 2013 tidaklah terlampau tinggi ke langit, tidaklah seluas lautan benua. Sekadar ingin melahirkan insan yang memenuhi aspek perkembangan yang termaktub dalam falsafah pendidikan kebangsaan dikalangan anak-anak masyarakat Iban di sekolah. Selain itu, saya juga berharap diri ini akan menjadi guru yang lebih berpengalaman, berkemahiran dan berkualiti daripada tahun sebelumnya, Insya'Allah,"

Melihat kepada wawasan guru-guru muda di atas, saya tidak fikir masa depan pendidikan nasional akan bergantung sepenuhnya kepada pelan-pelan yang akan bertukar nama setiap kali bertukarnya menteri pelajaran. Usaha pertama untuk memperbaiki sistem pendidikan negara harus bermula dengan memartabatkan guru pada tempatnya yang betul.

Pelarasan gaji mengikut struktur profesional setaraf doktor dan peguam, pengiktirafan sosial yang sewajarnya, wujudkan jawatan pembantu guru, menyediakan sistem sokongan kepada guru muda dari segi latihan dan aspek kepimpinan serta membuka ruang untuk mereka menggubal kurikulum sendiri dan mengajar mengikut keperluan murid.

Saya percaya di luar sana, ribuan guru muda bersemangat dan teruja untuk memulakan sesi 2013. Dengan bantuan "good leadership" yang mendorong inovasi, kebebasan dan suasana produktif untuk mereka bekerja dengan gembira, masa depan negara terletak di tangan-tangan ini yang akan memacu sistem pendidikan nasional untuk 30 tahun ke hadapan.

Namun menurut Alatas, kemajuan dalam pendidikan bermakna mempunya sistem pendidikan dengan tujuan yang jelas dan ideal. Ini termasuk i)penguasaan kemahiran; ii) mempunyai ilmu yang perlu; iii) memastikan perkembangan personaliti dan iv) memastikan perkembangan sifat solidariti sosial. Tujuan ini menurut Alatas lagi harus dibina dengan asas falsafah yang perlu diteliti dengan betul; kerana masalah besar akan timbul jika sistem pendidikan dibina secara "haphazard fashion".

Hartini Abdullah (2007) ketika mengulas makalah "The meaning of progress in contemporary education" menyifatkan Alatas menjelaskan pendidikan akan merasai kesan "tidak berkembang" jika kita meningkatkan maklumat tanpa meningkatkan pemahaman. Secara ringkasnya Alatas menekankan keupayaan dan kemahuan kita untuk menilai perkembangan sistem pendidikan adalah refleksi kepada perkembangan falsafah pendidikan secara keseluruhan.

Melengkapkan drama pendidikan nasional 2012 ialah Malaysia menjadi satu-satunya negara yang mengalami penurunan markah terbesar untuk Matematik dan Sains di antara 1999 hingga 2011 di dalam laporan TIMSS 2011.

Markah purata Matematik jatuh 79 mata berbanding Thailand (turun 40 mata) manakala untuk subjek Sains markah purata jatuh 66 mata berbanding  Macedonia (turun 51 mata). Tidak dilupakan kedudukan Malaysia di dalam laporan United Nation Education Index 2010 ialah 98 daripada 181 negara serta kedudukan Malaysia di dalam PISA 2009 ialah 55 daripada 74 negara.

Syed Husein Alatas ialah tokoh paling sesuai memahami citra budaya dan konteks pendidikan negara Malaysia yang berbilang kaum ini. Kemahuan kita untuk mengakui kebenaran bahawa pendidikan nasional tidak menunjukkan perkembangan terutamanya 10 tahun kebelakangan; selain tidak berada di landasan yang betul adalah sikap besar hati yang perlu kita utamakan kini.

Apa kata tahun 2013 dimulakan dengan menyokong dan membantu guru muda seperti Cikgu Azim, Cikgu Zubir, Cikgu Faiez, Cikgu Fathen, Cikgu Kai Qing dan Cikgu Hairi dengan menyediakan suasana kondusif untuk mereka menjalankan tugas dengan gembira?

Sebagai penutup, di hujung makalah tersebut Alatas menulis; "If a History teacher is very enthusiastic, he will pass this enthusiasm on to his students," 

* Ini adalah pendapat peribadi penulis

Some thoughts for the new year

Posted: 01 Jan 2013 03:44 PM PST

JAN 2 ― Writing a feature on faith and the Malaysian middle class reaffirms my belief that this country can never be secular, in spite of the many debates and attempts at separating the state and faith.

Malaysia is a country of believers, and Malaysia is also very political. If it's not the Muslim-Christian clash, it will be about the loss of animist beliefs due to religious conversion. Hindus want their temples to be acknowledged as divine and sacred.

There are two things that we must look at.

One is whether the religious debate is primarily an urban one.

Two: The inclusion of semi-urban and rural voices in Malaysia when it comes to faith-based dynamics.

Another thing that we must learn about is our religious histories. For instance, when it comes to Islam in Malaysia, it is not just about tauhid, fiqh, aqidah, and so forth.

Malaysian Muslims need to know who the messengers and the teachers of their faith were. We Muslims are who we are because of our teachers and the people who taught us about Islam.

And yet, we are different from Muslims in Indonesia, Turkey. Why are we known to be literalists? Are we reformists? Why do we believe wholeheartedly in a person who could be, well, not well informed about Islam?

Unlike our neighbours, acceptance about our past histories and spiritual heritage does not sit well with our authorities and even among our loved ones.

Nobody wants to dig and learn about how we truly came to be, and yet when it comes to our faith, we get defensive. We don't embrace our differences and similarities.

God is everywhere in Malaysian life. The small shrine you see by the roadside in Chow Kit. The store room which has been converted to a small surau for staff. As we walk around and go about our businesses, there are angels and spirits by us. The atheists laugh at our superstitions, but they can't deny that God is constant.

Even in politics.

My friend Sharanya Marivannan disagrees. Why can't Malaysia be secular? It can be like India, she suggests.

"The way I say it, secularism as a pledged ideal is not atheism. It is a way simply of setting forth a statement of privileging no religion over another. This, of course, is only on paper. But this matters, just as much as it matters that a marriage be registered. When it comes to law, law enforcement, etc, it really matters. For example, India is a secular state. But religion is everywhere, in beautiful and in ugly ways, here too."

***

Today the Fatwa Council Chief demanded for non-Muslims to stop asking for religious equality.

Like clockwork, angry responses against the statement came in. On Facebook, people air their grouses. Real, sane Malays don't think that, do they, people asked.

I've been to enough usrahs to know that the message to the Muslim public is clear: Allah cannot and is not to be shared with non-Muslims. Many professionals agree with the verdict, and many ulamaks, and yes even those who are seemingly open, say Allah is the domain of Muslims.

Why can't we model ourselves like Indonesia? India? Egypt? Utopia? Everyone wants to know.

We can, but we won't. We're not Indonesia. Nor India. We're Malaysia.

The truth is bitter to swallow, especially for non-Muslims, and Muslims who disagree with the fatwa (bear in mind that even some conservative Muslims do not agree with this).

Rightly or wrongly, the reality is that many Muslims feel that it is wrong for Allah to appear in the Bible, for non-Muslims to even utter "Allah." They cannot even accept a "salam" from a non-Muslim, even though this greeting is normal in other Muslim countries.

***

I have been assigned to write a feature on faith and the Malaysian middle class. One of the respondents raised an interesting point: what is middle class in an age when someone from Felda can become an instant millionaire, or when an impoverished woman is catapulted into it (middle class) by marriage?

I think this is something we must look at because there are various types of middle class communities. The "Melayu" middle class may earn the same as the more Westernised Malay middle class, but are their mentalities the same? Are their psyches too? Is the urbane Christian who prays and shops in Bangsar the same as the laid-back Christian in Penang, even though their lifestyles may be very similar?

Questions, questions, questions. All these as we start a new year. But one must be hopeful though ― if Malaysia is perfect, what would there be to fight for?

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist

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