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THE MALAY PRESS IN SINGAPORE, 1911-1915
Thesis in lieu of a paper in History
for Joint Honour School of Modern History and Politics
2004
SYED ZAKIR HUSSAIN
TRINITY COLLEGE, OXFORD
Table of Contents
1 Introduction: Malay-Muslim Singapore, 1911-1915 3
2 Neracha: a radical manifesto 7
3 Neracha’s campaigns 19
4 Utusan Melayu: a critical loyalist 30
5 Utusan’s core concerns 38
6 Conclusion: Contrasting visions of modernity 50
7 Bibliography 53
2
Malay-Muslim Singapore, 1911-1915
British rule over its corner of the Malay world, centred on the metropolis of
Singapore, was at the turn of the century being challenged by significant streams of
indigenous opinion that questioned and held that rule to account, even if they did not
directly challenge it. This challenge was most pronounced in the emergence and growth
of a native press, which questioned many foundations of colonial dominance in its
attempt to come to terms with the changed realities of a modernising world. Print was
more than a new medium that saw these issues debated, it ‘helped shape the perception,
language and articulation of the problems themselves’.1 While some elements of the
native press were antagonistic towards the status quo, other elements actively sought an
accommodation with and within it. It was a debate about hedging bets – to stick with the
way things were, or to challenge them head on. These two elements represented
conflicting approaches to modernity, amply reflected in editorials in the two Malay-
language newspapers published in Singapore in the early 1910s, a period of shock and
self-realisation for the Malays in a city undergoing rapid development. Singapore was the
most modernised part of Malaya, but it was a city where the Malays – virtually all of
whom were Muslim – were on the verge of oblivion. As a cosmopolitan port city,
Singapore offered a template for the future – of the progress that could be brought to the
still largely Malay peninsula, and of how the Malays would be dominated by the
colonially-encouraged influx of other races. By 1911, there were equal numbers of
Chinese and Malays in Malaya. The Chinese had already for a half-century been the
overwhelming majority in Singapore. There was thus a very real fear that the Malays
1 Juan R.I. Cole, ‘Printing and Urban Islam in the Mediterranean World, 1890-1920’, in Leila Tarazi Fawaz and C.A.Bayly eds. Modernity and Culture: From the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean (New York, 2002) p.361
3
would be further marginalized and eclipsed. It was therefore no surprise that these two
newspapers emerged to educate their community on this state of affairs, and to highlight
ways out of their decline in a climate of colonial capitalism.
The papers were the Islamic modernist Neracha (balancing scales; the Malay
word for the Arabic al-mizan) and the loyalist Utusan Melayu (The Malay Messenger).
These terms are used because in Neracha, ‘problems which confronted the Malays were
viewed from an Islamic perspective’.2 Utusan Melayu (hereafter referred to as Utusan)
was critically supportive and even praiseworthy of British rule. Previous work comparing
Al-Imam and Neracha to Utusan has asserted that the secular-religious distinction
between them has been more apparent than real. Neracha’s predecessor, the religious
monthly Al-Imam (1906-08), participated in the same discourse of modernity as did
Utusan.3 However, a closer scrutiny of the editorials and correspondence columns in
Neracha and Utusan over this period reveals that at the very least, the Malay elite, and by
inference the reading public, was being split into two camps – those more inclined to
seeing the world solely through a religious lens, which tended to be antagonistic in its
view of colonial rule; and those more inclined to a broader, liberal frame of perception,
one accepting and accommodating of colonial rule, albeit with a dose of criticism. The
former opted for a discourse of resistance, the latter, one of mediation. Members from
one camp often engaged in debates with and within the other camp, camps could as
always be crossed, and the newspapers were symbolic markers of each.
This thesis will highlight the key orientations and concerns of each paper, which
constitute the nuances and crucial assumptions of the views each camp advocated. It will
2 Khoo Kay Kim, Malay Papers and Periodicals as Historical Sources (Kuala Lumpur, 1984) p.23 3 Anthony Milner, The Invention of Politics in Colonial Malaya (Cambridge, 1995) p.189
4
assess how they see their underlying concerns from different ideological bases.4 It further
argues that such a distinction is, despite the similarities and common concerns of both
camps, at heart an irreconcilable one. The emphasis of Utusan was on religion as a lever
for progress but never as an entirely dominant overarching framework that should
regulate human endeavour. The emphasis of Neracha was on religion being dominant, as
the be-all and end-all of life in this world with the possibility of a surface adjustment to
modernity. Both papers’ visions competed for the hearts and minds of the Malays in this
period. Both papers saw the Malays in Singapore and the Malay Peninsula as defining the
Muslim community, which they formed an overwhelming part of. The Malays were
debating the parameters of their community, because although Islam was a defining
feature of the Malay, a Muslim was not automatically Malay. Among the key figures in
Malay and in the Malay press in this period were naturalised Arabs and Indian Muslims,
known as Jawi Peranakan, incidentally the name of the first ever Malay paper published
in Malaya, in Singapore in 1876. The papers were thus also concerned about shaping a
notion of communal identity – the community was construed more as a broader Malay-
Muslim one rather than as a Malay one, whose better-off members helped the less able
ones – as they were about adjusting to new social and economic processes that evolved
under colonial rule.
Colonial rule demanded that loyalties be reassessed. The outbreak of war in 1914
tested the loyalty of Muslims in the British Empire to their colonial masters. Pan-Islamic
sentiment, which Neracha campaigned, saw leadership for Muslims in the person of the 4 This perhaps sees a more recent parallel in the UMNO-PAS (United Malays National Organisation – Pan-Malayan Islamic Party) faultline in Malaysian politics – a continuation of these two different approaches to urbanisation, modernisation and colonial rule evident in this early and active stage of Malay print journalism in the 1910s. Comparing both papers does seem like comparing Malaysia’s pro-government dailies Utusan Malaysia and Berita Harian with the PAS’ weekly Harakah today – the former accepting the status quo and editorialising that people should be grateful to the government and make the most of what opportunities lie before them, the other focusing on its dissatisfaction with the status quo, both drawing upon scripture to articulate their view of religion in the political sphere.
5
Ottoman Sultan. Utusan, however, saw loyalty to government preceding extra-territorial
loyalties. It defended the Empire and its just governance in its pages, while Neracha
challenged the Empire, criticising the British for marginalising the community and for
supporting the Greeks and Italians in their offensives against the Turks in the Balkans.
For both papers, scripture mattered as a discursive tool. Islam was a key element in
Malay attitudes to modernity and change, in coping with a feeling of displacement and
marginalisation in a colonial milieu. But a faith central to the lives of Malay-Muslims
was inevitably interpreted in different ways by editors, correspondents, readers and
listeners, as the following chapters reveal.
6
Neracha: a radical manifesto
Neracha began publication in 1911 as a successor to Al-Imam (1906-08), the first
Islamic reformist periodical in Malay, which had ceased publication due to financial
constraints. Neracha was initially published three times a month and subsequently
weekly owing to demand from its readers for news of the First Balkan War (1912-1913).
Neracha was the first Islamically-oriented Malay newspaper giving adequate coverage to
external affairs notably in the Muslim world. With an initial circulation of 700 copies, at
a cost of 10 cents a copy or 3 dollars for a year’s subscription in Singapore and Malaya, it
had a readership in the Malay Peninsula, the Netherlands East Indies and also in southern
Thailand, India and the Middle East.5 Compared to Al-Imam, which Noer asserts was
censored and had its distribution restricted in Netherlands East Indies territory, Neracha
adopted a more measured tone. Unlike Al-Imam, it made no outward call for the Malays
to free themselves from bondage against their colonial masters. But like its more radical
predecessor, it reasserted the point that the Malays’ position in their own country would
be in jeopardy if they did not change their attitudes and assert themselves.6 Neracha
defined its existence as a newspaper not merely to report the news, but to benefit its
community and make it aware of its condition, so that its members would feel the need to
participate in educating themselves on matters of worldly and religious concern in order
to progress.7 At the same time, Neracha was fulfilling what its editors saw as a ‘religious
obligation’ (kewajipan) to guide its community on the path of progress and success. If the
Prophet in spreading his message was taunted and vilified, the editors observed, whatever
5 Straits Settlements Blue Book, in Ian Proudfoot, Pre-war Malay Periodicals (Kuala Lumpur, 1985) 6 Khoo Kay Kim, ‘Malay society, 1874-1920s’, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 5.2 (1974), 191 7 Neracha, 68, 15 Jan. 1913, p.1
7
criticisms the paper faced were nothing by comparison. What mattered was that it had
done its work and was of service to its readers.8
The primary concern of Neracha was religion, an issue which was central to its
editorials and to a significant majority of its correspondents’ letters. The issues and topics
touched upon were predominantly religious, touching on Europeans’ perceptions of
Muslim success, awareness of the precepts of the faith, concern at the Christianisation
efforts of missionaries towards Muslims, the role of religion in daily life, advice provided
by the Qur’an and Hadith (prophetic traditions), the romanisation of Malay notably in the
Netherlands East Indies, and the need for a pan-Islamic solidarity with the wider umat.9
This did not entail a neglect of other concerns, for where they were not ostensibly
religious, they were treated and addressed by Neracha’s editors within a religious
framework. Thus commentary on declining social capital, the lack of progress of the
Malays compared to other races, education, economic prosperity, football, the benefits of
cooperation and forming associations, emulating Europeans, and the education of women
were all referenced to the broader principles of the faith and supported by quotations
from the Qur’an and the Hadith.
Neracha ceased using the Gregorian date on its front page from its edition of 19
March 1913, publishing only the Islamic calendar or Hijri date where previously it
published both dates, giving no reason for the change. This suggests a hardening of its
line, especially as its sister periodical with a clearly defined religious orientation, Tunas
Melayu (Malay Sapling), was first published that same month. Surprisingly enough,
Tunas Melayu (1913-1914) gave Gregorian dates alongside the Islamic dates. This sister
publication, also edited by Neracha editor Haji Abbas bin Muhammad Taha assisted by
8 Ibid. 9 ‘Umat’ is synonymous with and the Malay form of the Arabic ‘ummah’ (Muslim community).
8
K. Anang and Abdul Hamid and others, was the first Malay magazine to be published.
Tunas Melayu aimed ‘to benefit its community so they would not be hindered or
hampered by its weaknesses and shortcomings’.10 It only published 16 issues, which
carried relatively lengthy features on Islamic history, issues pertaining to religious
practice, contributors’ letters and questions on matters of fiqh (religious laws), and had
pictures of Islamic sites and of the Balkan wars.
Islam, in Neracha’s perception, was critical to all aspects of everyday life, yet it
was also a modernist reading of Islam which its editors espoused, one that was amenable
to progress, modernity and capitalism. In one editorial, Neracha defined its religious
vision of progress, and stressed the need for mutual help as prescribed by the Qur’an.
Telah kita sebutkan kemajuan kita ialah mengetahui dan berpegang dengan agama kita maka boleh dipercayai ada setengah orang tatkala dilihatnya kemajuan Eropah dan kelemahan muslimin iaitu disangkanyalah keadaan kemajuan dan kenegerian itu bukannya dengan kerana agama padahal bahaya dan kejatuhan yang membawa kepada lembah kehinaan itu ialah sebab meninggalkan agama dan tiada menurut titahnya. Maka bangsa asing mengerjakan pekerjaan yang bersetuju bagaimana yang disuruh didalam agama maka mereka itu yang mendapat dan merasa kemajuan dan kemuliaan. Tidakkah Qur’an kita menyuruh kita tolong menolong pada pekerjaan yang berguna dan adakah kita mengerjakan tolong menolong itu bagaimana yang dikerjakan oleh bangsa asing yang bertamadun.11
(‘Agama dan Kemajuan’[Faith and Progress], Neracha, 86, 21 May 1913, p.1) A constant theme in Neracha’s editorials was the hadith ‘addin al-nasihat’
(religion is advice). A constant Qur’anic verse it cited translates into Malay as ‘dan
ingatkan olehmu kerana peringatan itu memberi manfaat orang yang mukmin’ (and
remind ye because reminders give benefits to those who believe and have faith). Faith, to
10 Tunas Melayu, 1, 1, 12 Feb. 1913, p.1 11 We have mentioned that progress for us is knowing and holding steadfast to our religion. Half of us who see European progress on one hand and Muslim weaknesses on the other infer that the condition of progress and statehood is not because of religion. But this is dangerous, because what has led to our decline to despicable depths is our leaving religion behind and not following its commands. Foreign races undertake what is prescribed by religion, hence they are among those who obtain and realise progress and respectability. Does not our Qur’an ask us to help one another to do useful work and do we do so, as civilised races do?
9
the men who edited Neracha and whose letters appeared in its correspondence columns,
was in one contributor’s words, self-contained and all-encompassing.
Maka di dalam Islam terkandung sekalian alatan mengadap Tuhan Raja mengadap kaum mengadap sahabat mengadap musuh mengatur kerajaan pemerintahnya penimbang perasaan sama manusia mencari kehidupan tabib hakim pelayaran adab santun dan sebagainya hingga peraturan perlingkahan perjalanan tidur baring berkenderaan dan sebagainya dengan sempurna.12 (‘Agama Islam’[The Islamic Faith], Neracha, 71, 5 February 1913, p.1) Islam was the prescribed cure for social and economic ills in Malay society, and a
core preoccupation of Neracha was the material problems of the Malays, material well-
being having been viewed as an essential part of the faith. In a rebuttal to a contributor
who suggested that Malay youth were more attuned to football and leisure, being less
inclined to the pursuit of wealth as Chinese youth were, Neracha’s editors stressed the
links between prosperity and faith. A contributor elaborated upon this succinctly.
Sebabnya diberi ingat dan nasihat supaya kita sedar keadaan orang yang mendatang ke tanah air kita dengan ‘sehelai sepinggang’ atau tikar bantal segulung di dalam sedikit masa sahaja ia telah jadi tuan kita dan tauke kita dan memerintah kita segala barang yang lazim bagi kehidupan hari2 semuanya di tangan mereka itu ialah kerana berhati berkehendakan kekayaan yang Tuan kata kebanyakan orang kita tiada berkehendakan dia. Pada hal harta dan kekayaan itu terlalu besar gunanya hingga di dalam rukun agama kita berkenaan sekali dengan harta dan kekayaan itu. Dan kita tiada dapat menyempurnakan cukup rukun Islam melainkan dengan harta maka sejahat2 fikiran yang tiada berkehendakan kekayaan yang boleh memberi sangat besar kegunaannya itu. Hendaklah dibuang sama sekali fikiran yang keji lagi memutuskan cita2 yang berguna itu maka satu daripada yang menjatuhkan kita ialah pikiran yang keji semacam itu.13 (Neracha, 89, 12 Jun 1913, p.5)
12 Islam contains all the tools to face God, King, community, friends, foes, to organise government and administration, to balance feelings for fellow men, to seek a living, doctor, judge, journey, custom and manners and so on until rules, disputes, travelling, sleeping, lying, taking vehicles and so on with perfection. 13 We should realise that the condition of those who come to our homeland with only the shirts on their backs or just their bedding in a short span of time have become our masters and employers and govern us and every daily essential is in their hands because they cautiously desire wealth and you, Sir, say many of our people do not desire that. In reality goods and wealth are extremely useful to the extent that our religious precepts significantly touch on goods and wealth. And we cannot properly fulfil the requirements of Islam without goods, so bad is the thought of not wanting wealth that can provide numerous uses. We need to discard such despicable thoughts that in reality lead to our downfall.
10
The above suggests that the influences and driving forces behind capitalism,
notably self-reliance and industry, were to the paper’s editors very much in line with
Islamic precepts. Indeed, it was in capitalist Singapore that modernist Islam flourished
and thrived in this period, it was Singapore that served as a centre for printing, publishing
and the haj. The Islam Neracha urged its readers in the Malay world to abide by
emphasised material progress and economic betterment as a prerequisite of the faith, a
point less emphasised by the Middle Eastern reformists. Seemingly incongruous with the
hardline stance Neracha more commonly adopted, this appears to be shaped by the
influences of Singapore’s economic growth in this period. Neracha’s editors and
contributors were amongst those acquainted with both the Middle East and the
Archipelago, who reinterpreted Islamic ideas imported from the Middle East to fit the
needs of the new political and social environments in which they came to rest.14 Thus in
the eyes of the paper’s editors, who encouraged the formation of co-operative
associations and commercial enterprises among their readers, a community that was not
materially well-off was not a successful one.
Eunos Abdullah, the founding editor of Utusan, saw the newspaper as an
educator, contributing to informed public opinion, and an arena for discussion and
debate, encouraging the creation of a new public sphere.15 The same could be said of
Neracha’s publisher, Haji Abbas bin Muhammad Taha, and editor, K.Anang, who
actively encouraged contributions to the paper and often lamented the lack of space,
which constrained their ability to include as many letters as they would have liked. Born
in Singapore in 1885 to parents of Malay origin hailing from Minangkabau, Haji Abbas
was sent to Mecca as a teenager to study and returned in 1905 to become a teacher. When
14 Fred R. von der Mehden, Two Worlds of Islam (Gainesville, 1993), p.15 15 Anthony Milner, p.130
11
invited to help with Al-Imam in 1906, his agreement was immediate to the opportunity to
help publish an independent organ to voice reformist concepts, ideas and activities.16 He
became assistant editor of Al-Imam under Sheikh Tahir Jalaluddin and was made full
editor in March 1908 while remaining an imam at his village mosque in Tanjong Pagar
where he subsequently became a kadi (religious law official). K. Anang was the alias
used by Mas Abdul Hamid, who according to a later British intelligence report, was
expelled from the Straits Settlements in 1915. A religious teacher at his Minto Road
home in Singapore who was educated at the Raffles School, K. Anang was later
described as ‘continually drawing attention to British troubles in India’, and ‘a well-
known Khilafat agitator’ when he was alleged to be the editor of a religious paper Islam
Bergerak (Islam Astir) in Java that began publication in 1922.17 The harsh unrelenting
idiom of the religious ideologue in Haji Abbas was however tempered with a distinct
tolerance and willingness to represent alternative views and dissent against the editorial
line, even if at the end of the day, he made it clear where his ideological preferences lay.
This was evident in the lengthy debate on the permissibility of football, which the
following chapter expands on. Neracha’s editorials and contributors, like those of
Utusan, continually exhorted Malays to unite together in a purposeful manner in the
interests of the common good.18 Yet over previous decades, the growth of a religious
division within the Muslim Malay community had been noted and commented upon by
civil servants and missionaries. In an editorial commenting on the foundation of Al-
Ittihad, a fortnightly Malay-language newspaper set up by Malay students in Egypt in
1913, Neracha noted that this would bring the number of ‘completely Malay newspapers
and periodicals’ (suratkhabar dan majalah Melayu semata2 pada serba-serbinya) to five
16 Abu Bakar Hamzah, Al-Imam: Its Role in Malay Society 1906-1908 (Kuala Lumpur, 1991), pp.127-8 17 The Malayan Bulletin of Political Intelligence (Mar. 1922) in Colonial Office Records C.O. 273/516 18 William Roff, The Origins of Malay Nationalism (New Haven, 1967), p.183
12
– Neracha; Warta Palembang in Palembang, Al-Moenir in Padang, Al-Ittihad in Egypt
and the forthcoming Tunas Melayu - and hopefully this would increase.19 Implicit in this
listing was the fact that Utusan was not an independent Malay paper in its entirety as it
was affiliated with and owned by the Singapore Free Press, although it had independent
editors. Neracha made no discernible direct reference to Utusan, unlike the latter, which
was more generous in this regard.
Neracha, like Al-Imam before it, presented an alternative template to loyalist and
traditionalist conceptions of social and religious life in the Malay community. Its
prescriptions for the progress of the umat in the Malay world were presented in a heavily
Islamic register, relying strongly on the teachings of Muhammad Abduh (1849-1905) and
Rashid Rida (1865-1935) in Egypt, seeing in a thorough implementation of Islam, in
particular the rigid application of the shari’a, a solution to Muslim weakness. There was
no doubt that the editors of Neracha, who had been involved in the production of Al-
Imam, were modern men who, according to Anthony Milner, ‘enunciated the religion and
law of Allah in a new idiom’.20 But it was also an idiom that was fixed on the primacy of
the religious dimension in everyday life. At the same time, Neracha contributed to the
homogenization as well as the diversification of experience between its readership and
the wider umat. Neracha linked Malays throughout the archipelago, and made them
aware of international events.21 Through the reporting of these events, Neracha
advocated another stringent element of its view of the faith – solidarity with the rest of
the umat. An editorial response to a reader sceptical of Neracha for its pro-Turkish
coverage of the Balkan war strongly reaffirmed two other commitments: to convey the
19 Neracha, 66, 1 Jan. 1913, p.1 20 Anthony Milner, p.189 21 Virginia Matheson Hooker, Writing a new society: social change through the novel in Malay (Leiden, 2001), p.79
13
truth regarding people whose homelands were raided and seized and who fought
wholeheartedly facing death and injury; and to show solidarity with the oppressed, be
they Muslim or of other faiths.22
Befitting its radical orientation, Neracha admonished Muslims for indulging in
leisure activities, notably football, when fellow Muslims were suffering the effects of war
in the Balkans and of colonial rule elsewhere. It urged its readers to cease playing
football ‘to commemorate the sorrow that envelops our Muslim brothers in their large
lands’ (kerana meraikan dukacita yang mengelubungi saudara kita muslimin di negeri
yang besar2) and to have faith in a religion that urged fraternal sentiment, to weep in
unity and to rejoice together.
Di mana kita taruh iman kita dan kepercayaan kita dengan agama kita yang telah menyatukan semua muslimin di seluruh dunia ini bersaudara tiba2 saudara kita yang menjaga kerajaan khalifah mengidap sakit dan mengerang siang malam dan kita zahir ramai2 bertempiak sorak dan bersuka2 ria maka begitukah kita muslimin mesti hidup di atas muka bumi ini atau itukah yang dihitungkan jalan kemajuan bagi bangsa Melayu innalillahi wainnailaihi rajiun.23
(‘Perang dan Bersuka2’[War and Enjoyment], Neracha, 66, 1 Jan 1913, p.1) There was, however, a further side to Neracha’s international outlook. A
contributor urged readers to travel to get what is good from abroad for the ‘watan’ and
‘tanah air’ (motherland) for future generations.24 The role of the press in the emergence
of a Malay nationalism as well as the popularisation of associational life has been
highlighted by Roff, and Milner tracked the political development of the Malays through
his comparison of Utusan and Al-Imam in the period immediately preceding this study
(1906-1908). But a study of Neracha also reveals the depth of sentiment and reaction
among the Malays to changes in their society and in the wider world. Evincing a growing 22 Neracha, 31, 1 May 1912, p.2
23 Where do we place our faith and belief in our religion that has united all Muslims in this world as brothers? When suddenly our brothers who preserve the Caliphate are sick and suffering day and night we cheer and enjoy ourselves day and night. Is this how we as Muslims should live, is this counted as a path to progress for the Malay race? To God do we come from and to him do we return. 24 Neracha, 32, 8 May 1912, p.3
14
awareness and consciousness of a burgeoning civil society, Neracha highlighted the
significance of the wider elements of religion, race and country – which fed later
nationalist sentiment – in the Malay perception of the world in this period. Ahmat bin
Adam observed that once native Indonesians ‘had acquired a press of their own, their
awakening to the various problems of a colonized society gave them further impetus to
remedy their backward situation’.25 The same could be said of the inhabitants of British
Malaya, with newspapers and periodicals from Malaya and West Sumatra being read on
both sides of the Straits of Malacca. Neracha offered scant coverage of developments in
the wider context of Singapore’s multi-racial, or plural society in Furnivall’s term, ‘with
different sections of the community living side by side, but separately, within the same
political unit.’26 Each ethnic community was rather self-contained, usually maintaining
only a tenuous economic link with other ethnic communities. It was through this link,
aided by the press, that the Malay-Muslim reader was aware that the other communities
were moving far ahead of his own. The Malay community’s resulting bitterness at this
situation was reflected as well as reinforced by Neracha. Not only had colonialism
exposed the Malays to challenges from immigrants and left them impoverished in their
homelands, their efforts to remedy their dire condition were often thwarted by colonial
authorities who feared a proto-nationalist backlash. An editorial on Sarekat Islam
(Islamic Association) formed in 1912 (originally established as Sarekat Dagang Islam –
Association of Muslim Traders – in Surakarta, Java, in 1911 by Indonesian Muslim
merchants attests to this.
Sesungguhnya telah kita dengar tuduhan orang yang tinggi tamadunnya di atas Syarikat Islam yang dibuka oleh saudara2 kita yang di bawah perintah Belanda.
25 Ahmat bin Adam, The Vernacular Press and the Emergence of Modern Indonesian Consciousness (Ithaca, 1995), p.181 26 Carl Trocki in Nicholas Tarling (ed.), Cambridge History of Southeast Asia vol.2 (Cambridge, 1992), p.109
15
Maka tidaklah sekali2 kita fikir inilah nasib dan bahagian kita orang Jawi ini tiada boleh membuka satu2 pekerjaan yang besar2 manfaatnya bagi kaum dan bangsa sendiri melainkan ada sahaja bencana dan tohmah oleh yang tinggi tamadunnya diatas pekerjaan yang tersebut itu. Melainkan jika kita buka permainan yang besar boleh melalaikan banyak saudara kita supaya tercebur ke dalam lembah kehinaan dan kejatuhan pada kehidupan dunia dan agama maka yang demikian itu boleh mendapat puji dan tiada kena tuduh apa2 daripada orang yang tinggi tamadunnya.27 (‘Syarikat Islam’, Neracha, 91, 25 June 1913, p.1)
Although this bitterness was primarily apparent in urbanised Singapore and
Penang, similar sentiments prevailed throughout the Malay States, in Borneo, and among
Malay students in the Middle East. There was significant correspondence from the
Middle East, and Neracha remains a major source of information on the Malay student
community in Cairo and Mecca throughout this period. Malay students in these cities
subscribed to Neracha to keep abreast of developments back home, remaining closely
attuned to developments in the Malay world while being exposed to broader
developments in the Muslim world and being active contributors of opinions. Indeed, a
contributor challenged Malay students in Europe to take a similar initiative in setting up
their own paper. Another suggested that studying in England, America, Japan, France,
and Germany had its merits.28 This drew a reaction from a student at Al-Azhar, the
citadel of traditional Muslim scholarship, who argued it was better for Muslims to pursue
worldly knowledge in a Muslim university such as Al-Azhar. This was refuted by
Neracha, which argued that modern and scientific education available in Europe and
elsewhere was not comparable to that available in Egypt, and that as with all things,
Muslims should learn from the good and not follow the bad. Neracha was stern in its line
27 We have heard accusations by those of noble civilisations, pertaining to Sarekat Islam which was started by our brothers under Dutch rule. Not once have we thought that this is our fate and portion as Jawis unable to start any one initiative that would bring much benefit to our community and race without there being disaster and curses from those of noble civilisations regarding those works of ours. Unless we start big entertainments that can lull many of our brothers into complacency so that we are sunk in despicable depths and falter in this world and in our religion, only then can we get praise and not be accused of anything. 28 Neracha, 74, 26 Feb. 1913, pp.2-3, 84, 7 May 1913, p.1
16
that what Egypt had to offer was different from what was available in the Malay world,
and that there were some things that could not be learnt from Al-Azhar.
Pada hal berapa ilmu kepandaian dunia yang terlalu besar manfaatnya tidak ada diajar di Mesir dan orang2 Mesir sendiri beberapa banyak meninggalkan tanah airnya kerana pergi menuntut ilmu yang manfaat itu di Eropah bagaimana yang disuruh oleh Rasul Allah menuntut ilmu walau di negeri Cina pada hal negeri Cina pada tempoh itu tiada ada orang Islam di sana melainkan yang ada beberapa kepandaian2 pada tempoh itu sahaja dan satu daripada yang menjatuhkan kita pada kepandaian dunia ialah kita tiada belajar ilmu Eropah melainkan kita diiktikadkan belajar ke Mesir sahaja sudah cukup.29
(Neracha, 96, 30 July 1913, p.5)
A verbal dispute between Neracha’s editors and contributors and Al-Ittihad’s
contributors ensued with one Neracha correspondent chiding students in Egypt for
disliking criticism because ‘they are religious men and over here people are not like
them’ (mereka orang alim dan orang di sini tidak macam mereka) because they did not
know European languages or much more about what knowledge was available in the
Netherlands East Indies. A student in Mecca described Al-Ittihad as being uncertain of its
purpose unlike Neracha, changing stance as issues arose, and that the difference between
the two was vast. Neracha’s contributors ridiculed Al-Ittihad as amateur for believing
that what was available in Europe was available in Egypt. If this was the extent of
knowledge at Al-Azhar, one correspondent wrote, it would be better to remain in the
Malay Archipelago.30
Where Neracha adopted a critical stance against seeking knowledge solely in the
Middle East, it stressed the importance of education nearer to home in the quest to
improve its kaum (community) and bangsa (race), one of its core concerns. Knowledge
was not merely demanded by God, but was essential in developing a sense of community. 29 In reality a certain amount of worldly knowledge that is of immense value is not taught in Egypt and many Egyptians themselves leave their homeland to seek that knowledge in Europe. The Prophet urged the seeking of knowledge even in China, when in his time there were no Muslims in China. One of the reasons for our decline in worldly knowledge is that we do not seek European knowledge and think studying in Egypt alone is sufficient. 30 Neracha, 106, 8 Oct. 1913, p.1, 108, 22 Oct. 1913, pp.5-6
17
Some teachers in the Malay States had requested to use Neracha and Tunas Melayu in
schools and met with their European school administrators to campaign for this, but were
rebuffed in their attempts. Neracha urged them to not be disheartened, for after all, the
editors noted, there were those in the community who appreciated its value and
program.31 In the end, while much of its criticism was directed at others, its strongest
criticism was reserved for its own community. In its eyes, the community was highly
culpable for the parlous state it was in. But only the community could remedy this, and it
was with this in mind that the paper espoused its causes and campaigns.
Baca dan dengarlah hal mereka itu di dalam surat2 khabar di dunia ini nescaya boleh mengambil insaf dan iktibar tiadalah sesia mengetahui ehwal dunia ini iaitu mana yang baik disimpan dan mana yang jahat dibuang dan hendaklah diingat2 dan difikir2kan kejatuhan dan kebelakangan kita supaya bangkit rajin dan usaha hendak bergerak dan berkisar kepada mendapatkan kemuliaan dan kemajuan maka yang dituntut bagi kaum kita ini bukannya bagaimana yang dituntut oleh orang2 Turki atau orang2 Mesir akan kaum mereka itu hanyalah yang dikehendaki bagi kaum kita ini biarlah keadaannya itu satu kaum yang boleh dipandang orang... Dan tidakkah satu daripada kejatuhan kita iaitu keadaan kita ada berpuluh2 milion dan ada orang besar2 kita dan ada orang kaya2 kita dan ada ulama kita tiba2 jika tidak ada daripada kita orang yang berhawa hendak mekhidmat dan memajukan kaumnya dan menuntutkan supaya bermutu sedikit bangsanya tidakkah yang demikian itu tanda mati kita berperasaan yang sebegitu banyak kita tidak ada bagi kita satu madrasah yang besar yang kita sendiri bangkitkan supaya kita tanam perasaan yang manfaat bagi anak2 kita dan mengajarkan ajaran dunia dan agama mereka itu.32 (‘Kaum Melayu’ [The Malay Community], Neracha, 42, 17 July 1912, p.1)
31 Neracha, 76, 12 Mar. 1913, p.3 32 Read and listen to their situation in the papers in the world in order to be remorseful and to remember. It is not pointless to know of the affairs of this world – that which is good is retained and that which is bad left aside and it must be remembered and considered, our decline and backwardness, so that we rise again diligent and striving to progress and advance to gain respectability and progress. Thus that which is required for our community is not that which is sought by the Turks or the Egyptians for theirs – all that we seek is to be a community that can be well-regarded by others... Is not one of the reasons for our decline that our notables and wealthy members and clerics do not strive to serve and help our community progress and demand that their race be more up to the mark. Is this not a sign that we have lost any sentiment as a community, that among so many of us not one large school have we ourselves built up to inculcate a feeling of purpose for our young and to instruct them in worldly as well as religious teachings.
18
Neracha’s Campaigns
It is no surprise that Neracha was at heart a campaigning newspaper. The three
recurring campaigns it undertook were against Christianisation efforts directed at
segments of the Singapore Muslim community, against football, which it viewed as
unseemly and a waste of time given the dire situation of the Malays and the condition of
the ummah, and against the romanisation of Malay which it viewed with alarm as the thin
end of the wedge to Europeanise the language and draw Malays away from their Islamic
tradition and Arabic script. A fourth campaign – against the backwardness of its kaum
and for the need for education and self-awareness – was also keenly pursued. Yet, for all
the bitterness of sentiment and angry tones, Neracha’s editors and contributors reflected a
strong sense of self-confidence. This was rooted partly as a result of conviction in the
divine, but partly perhaps as a reflection of their increasingly comfortable material
circumstances. Singapore in this period was prosperous, and more than anything else
Neracha was a contributor, if not the primary vehicle, for cohesion among the Malay
Muslim elite. In this context, it was aware of how it could effect social change both
within and outside its community. Its unflinching sense of mission was constantly
reflected in its editorials, which reiterated time and again the conviction that it existed to
serve and present reminders to its community as expounded by the Qur’an.
This was demonstrated in its articles on the Christianisation efforts of
missionaries in Singapore. A contributor from Perak noted that while an archbishop was
reportedly glad that there were no restrictions on Malays embracing Christianity under
agreements with the Malay rulers, there were also no restrictions on white men
embracing Islam under agreements with the European governments. This contributor
therefore suggested that Islamic associations in Singapore should hold an open reception
19
along the lines of what had been done by Christian priests who were seeking to convert
Malays. When they begin to persuade the community to convert to their religion, this
contributor suggested, ‘our imams should come forward and invite these priests to
convert to our religion, as they have done to our people – after all, it was they who started
this, not us’.33 In another editorial, the editors noted with disdain the formation of a club
for Malays in Pasir Panjang, Singapore, headed by a missionary who attracted new
members by organising football games.34 They linked this trend to developments in the
wider world as conversion efforts were also reported in the Egyptian newspapers from
which Neracha extensively culled reports on the declining fortunes of the Ottoman
Empire. Yet the journal also invoked its mission to provide advice (nasihat) to its
community, and did so out of religious obligation. Its editors also went beyond the call of
journalistic duty to take some form of action against the efforts of these missionaries,
pledging to visit Pasir Panjang and speak at the surau (prayer house) on religious matters.
As men who believed in their faith, they felt an obligation to give advice on religion
against the efforts of missionaries.35 The main missionary involved, a retired agent for the
British and Foreign Bible Society John Haffenden, had indeed gathered members for
team sports but also to discuss contemporary issues and study the Bible. Neracha’s
intervention saw Haji Abbas and some forty men visiting the surau at Pasir Panjang and
challenging the missionaries and club members to make themselves known. This act,
regarded as little better than thuggery by the missionaries, nevertheless cooled the
openness of the young club members towards missionary advances.36
33 ‘Maka imam kita tampillah pula memujuk paderi itu sendiri suruh ia masuk ke agama kita. Yakni ikut paderi itu dan ikut segala perbuatannya bagaimana2 jalan dilakukannya itu... kita diikut sahaja yakni paderi orang putih yang memulakan bukan kita.’ Neracha, 30, 18 Apr. 1912, p.4 34 Neracha, 77, 19 Mar. 1913, p.1 35 Neracha, 78, 26 Mar. 1913, p.1 36 Robert Hunt, ‘Interreligious Conflict and Compromise in Late 19th and Early 20th Century Singapore’, Sejarah, 4, 1996, 73-74
20
Yet the editors, no doubt in a tone suffused with some irony but also
acknowledging the pluralism and choice that had to be offered to its readers in a
cosmopolitan society, recognised that in the end it was up to readers to follow whichever
path they chose. Quoting from the Qur’an, ‘whosoever wants to will have faith and
whosoever wants to will disbelieve’ (siapa mahu hendaklah ia beriman dan siapa mahu
hendaklah ia kafir), they managed to combine wisdom and irony. This campaign
attracted supporters telling Neracha to continue its good work, but it also had its
detractors. A member of the aforementioned club sent a letter of complaint regarding
Neracha’s coverage to the All-Malaya Football Association which was sent on to
Europeans. Neracha noted wryly:
Zaman sekarang ini zaman ada ‘Malaya’ menjadikan setengah orang ada yang tiada puas hati dengan satu suratkhabar Melayu ini diterbitkan dengan niat hendak memberi manfaat bagi yang ramai dengan menjalankan kewajipan menanam perasaan yang berguna dan mengeluarkan peringatan yang sememang2nya telah disuruh oleh Qur’an kita.37 (‘Pasir Panjang’, Neracha, 79, 2 April 1913, p.1.)
Neracha’s campaigning extended to football and leisure, which Malays were
more inclined towards. A surface consideration of Neracha’s stance might make its
opposition seem overly rigid and certainly the issue of football generated widespread
debate and dissension amongst its readers. Yet the editors were aware that while
developed societies played football, the Malays, whom they viewed as being in a state of
‘weakness’ (kelemahan) both in terms of this world and the hereafter, should prioritise
education first. They should not be playing football when they did not know such
essential requisites of worldly life as reading and writing. How much more so, when so
37 In these times in [colonial] Malaya, some people are not contented with this Malay newspaper published with the intention of providing benefit to many by carrying out its obligation to inculcate useful sentiment and issue advice, as urged in our Qur’an.
21
many knew nothing of religious matters.38 Readers urged a more balanced approach to
football, suggesting that football kept youth from fighting and that Malay youth had
different interests from Chinese youth. They thus proposed that football clubs be
combined with educational projects. After all, the editors argued, the Malay proverb
‘rambut sama hitam hati berlainan’ (hair is the same black but hearts differ) implied that
there are those who like football just as there are those who like to write or converse or
seek wealth or fame. Perhaps we should bridge all sides? Neracha’s editors were,
however, insistently against all football. This was backed by a reader from Penang who
lamented the loss of social capital since the setting up of associations. He pointed out that
funerals and weddings were now less well attended and longed for the old times before
the community ‘had sunk to such deplorable depths’ (sudah termasuk di dalam lubuk
yang hina itu).39
When it came to combating the decline of Malay written in Arabic script, referred
to as Jawi, in favour of the Latin script, a broader campaign was called for. In a piece on
the soon-to-be-launched Tunas Melayu, Neracha’s editors urged a move against the
abolition of Jawi, which was seen as another move to draw the Malays away from their
religion. They urged the community to discard the modern custom of publishing Malay in
Latinised form, and instead revert to using Malay script – a term applied to Arabic-
scripted Malay – which had been all but eradicated in the Netherlands East Indies where
Malay newspapers and books were largely lettered in Latin script. The editors argued,
Malay could not be properly articulated in such script, whose use would damage the
Malay language, but worse still, was an accessory to removing their religion from the
38 Neracha, 87, 28 May 1913, p.1 39 Neracha, 89, 12 June 1913, p.5, 90, 18 June 1913, p.1
22
backward Malays.40 Neracha also referred to new journals published in Padang, West
Sumatra, and expressed concern that the death of Jawi would spread to the Malay
Peninsula if the Malays were not careful enough to uphold Jawi. Laffan notes that the
decline of Jawi in the East Indies had already weakened bonds with the Malay Peninsula
there.41 Warta Palembang had, however, changed from Latin script to Jawi and the
editors hoped the community would support it.42 They also noted that an article in the
Padang-based Latin-scripted Oetoesan Melajoe, reported the periodical Al-Moenir
announcing the publication of another Malay newspaper in Malay script, Soeloeh
Melajoe (Malay Torch), in Padang as a traditionalist publication because of
dissatisfaction with the modernist Al-Moenir. Neracha did not dwell on the divisions
between these papers. Instead, it was glad with this growth in the number of Malay
language newspapers, but hoped both ‘torches’ would be united rather than divided on
key campaigning issues because unity of purpose would create a ‘far brighter’
(menambahi terang lagi) condition whereas division would lead to all-round darkness.43
This growth came sooner for Neracha also recorded, in approving tones, the arrival of a
copy of traditionalist-oriented Suara Melayu published in Padang. Although published in
romanised script (Rumi) like half of all the other Malay papers, it nevertheless had items
of interest and benefit that merited its continuance and progress. Al-Moenir also
mentioned a new paper to be published in Padang in Jawi, called Al-Akhbar.44 In a much
later editorial, Neracha suggested that ‘the decline of the Malay script would lead to the
decline of the Malay race’ (telah dikatakan, tidak ada bahasa, tidak ada bangsa).45
40 Neracha, 66, 1 Jan. 1913, p.1 41 Michael Laffan, Islamic Nationhood and Colonial Indonesia (London, 2003), p.180 42 Neracha, 34, 22 May 1912, p.3 43 Neracha, 78, 26 Mar. 1913, p.1 44 Neracha, 81, 16 Apr. 1913, p.4 45 Neracha, 172, 10 Feb. 1915, p.1
23
Throughout its operation, however, the decline of Jawi in the wider archipelago
was not as great a challenge as that posed by Chinese immigration, the effects of which
were felt ever more keenly. Certainly, the wider setting and outstanding role of Singapore
and Penang as ‘cultural brokers, translating the new purity, rationalism, and vitality of
Islam into the Malay language… and also into terms relevant to a local Malayo-
Indonesian frame of reference’ made the Straits Settlements very much part of the Malay
world even if ‘their vigorous and cosmopolitan Muslim groups were exceptional: small
groups living in the shadow of thriving Western and Chinese mercantile communities that
could afford to ignore Islamic activism, not being in the least challenged by it.’46 At the
same time, the greater participation of the non-Malays in the colonial economy, borne
most sharply in Singapore, in all likelihood engendered amongst them a sense of
superiority towards the Malays. Immigrant – mostly Chinese – industry, thrift and
adaptability to modern ways contrasted with the Malays’ perceived indolence and
rigidity. By the 1910s, the Malays saw their economic and political eclipse in colonial
Singapore, submerged as they were in a European-ruled Chinese city ‘with limited
opportunities for social mobility in a harshly competitive pioneering society’.47
In this context, Neracha did not so much attack the colonial political order for
creating a plural society through immigration and for the subtle penetration of Western
values through Christian missionaries, but urged the Malays to turn these situations to
their advantage. Neracha featured criticism of the Malay community for being lazy,
quarrelsome and complacent, and depicted the kaum as a diseased organism that needed
remedying.48 Certainly, part of the remedy lay in a return to the teachings of religion. Yet
readers were constantly urged to take a leaf out of the ‘industry’ (rajin) of Chinese
46 Harry Benda, in Holt et al eds., The Cambridge History of Islam vol. 2A (Cambridge, 1977), pp.184-185 47 Lily Zubaidah Rahim, The Singapore Dilemma (Oxford, 1998), pp.51, 71 48 Neracha, 138, 3 June 1914, p.1
24
immigrants, some of whom had gone on to study medicine and related disciplines in
Europe and others who actually lived there, but ‘wanted to treat their community and
cure them of the dangers of decline’ (dia hendak mengubatkan kaumnya di seluruh dunia
ini dan hendak disembuhkannya daripada bahaya kejatuhan).49
A contributor from Japan, Ibrahim bin Ahmad, was scathing about the decline of
the kaum both from a religious and a political aspect. Football and games had led to
Malays neglecting the Maghrib dusk prayer, and made them indifferent to their condition
of poverty, and the way they were now ‘governed and enslaved by other races’ (kita ini
tinggal di bawah perintah dan perhambaan bangsa2 yang lain). Many who worked in the
cities were lowly office boys (thambi), while those employed in the orchards (dusun2)
were gardeners. The number of those who were clerks or plantation owners was
minuscule.50 Ibrahim bin Ahmad drew upon the experience of the Japanese in not wasting
time. Indeed, the Japanese were constantly cited by Neracha as an example of a people
(bangsa) that had advanced on a par with the Europeans. In another edition, Neracha
featured a report from Egyptian newspaper Al-Muayyid concerning a speech made at a
gathering of ulama in Lucknow by Rashid Rida, who spoke of the unity of all Muslims.
Brandishing a pamphlet published in English on the condition of the Malays and
Javanese, Rida had described their situation as the most deplorable amongst all the
Muslims. Neracha’s comment on this report was equally scathing of its community.
Orang2 lain telah mengambil tahu hal kita dan semakin tersiar dan diketahui oleh orang dunia akan kelalaian dan kejatuhan kita ke dalam lubuk seduran maka tidakkah juga kita sendiri hendak mengambil endah dan sedar diri supaya bersatu perasaan boleh tolong menolong pada mengadakan gerak yang berkenaan dengan pengetahuan dan pelajaran dan kita taruh dahulu permainan itu pada pengikut yang habis di bawah sekali dan kita biarkan walau dipuji oleh Sultan sekali telah pun permainan itu. Kerana kita lihat Cina2 telah membuka beberapa madrasah
49 Neracha, 43, 24 July 1912, p.1 50 Neracha, 30, 18 Apr. 1912, p.3
25
untuk anak2 mereka dan bersusun2lah baris2an kanak2 mereka itu jadi seperti permainan kanak2 itu maka patutlah pula kita bersatu fikiran.51 (‘Melayu-Jawa’[Malay-Javanese], Neracha, 37, 9 June 1912, p.1) As unforgiving as Neracha was in this instance, the journal could be said to take
such a stance because it believed this to be the best way of serving its community’s
interests. It never wavered from a commitment to being bold and taking unpopular
stances. Despite its pan-Islamic credentials, Neracha maintained a determined insistence
on editorial independence. Its editors did not want to be under any external pressure on
what they should publish, and reaffirmed their policy of even publishing features that
went against their editorial convictions (walau menyalahi fikiran kita) and rebutting them
because they believed their readers would be sufficiently discerning. They declared their
willingness to cease publishing should they have to do anyone’s bidding.52
Neracha’s bold social criticism and emphasis on progress was matched by a
sturdy and frequently heated exchange of views and comment, often carried out in
forceful language and imagery that had quite an impact despite its heavy and overbearing
style which stemmed from a deep but understated paternalism on the part of the editors,
and an obligation to transnational concerns given its international readership and
contributors. What would the Neracha reader, in the more than four brief years of its
existence, garner about Malay society and the wider world, and about the religion the
journal professed to? Neracha’s underlying message was that of the link between
progress and religion. The paper’s pronouncements and arguments, whether on meeting
the challenge posed by Christian missionaries, Chinese immigrants or colonial
51 Others have known of our condition and others are increasingly aware of our recklessness and decline. Should we not then take heed and be aware ourselves, to be of united sentiment in helping one another to create a movement with knowledge and education, and place games at the lowest level and leave them aside even if praised by the sultan[s]. Because we see the Chinese have set up several schools for their children whose lines are orderly as in a children’s game. Hence we should be united in thought. 52 Neracha, 38, 19 June 1912, p.3
26
authorities, consistently involved a broader, modern interpretation and enunciation of
faith and scripture for a changing age.
Criticising the numerous Malay clubs in Singapore and elsewhere, which were
both disunited and leisure orientated, Neracha brought up the matter of Japanese clubs
that organised a speech pertaining to Islam at least once a month. Neracha argued that
this showed ‘the Japanese to be more observant of Islamic precepts than Malays because
of their knowledge’ (Orang Jepun terlebih menurut titah Islam daripada kita oleh sebab
pengetahuan mereka).53 This observation was made in the hope that the community
would open its eyes and develop a self-realisation that it should not be negligent. Because
the Malays had fallen so far behind in many respects, it had to take a leaf out of the many
organisations and support structures other races had established and emulate them,
otherwise the Malays themselved risked being left further behind. Neracha also displayed
a frank openness towards recognising the plurality of religions, induced by its operating
in a cosmopolitan city. An editorial noted that religion was a guide for various
communities and ‘each community had its own religion, even if it were man-made and
arose from reason’ (tiada kita lihat satu2 kaum di atas muka bumi ini melainkan masing2
ada dengan agamanya walau agama yang dibikin2 oleh manusia dan diterbitkan
daripada akal).54 Another editorial also noted that disputing with other religions was not
beneficial because it led to strained relations and hatred, something anathema to religion.
Neracha further differentiated between missionaries and the government, presumably so
its readers would not misread the government’s intentions:
Adapun kerajaan tidak sekali2 menaruh ganggu tentang kebebasan agama masing2 ialah daripada adil kerajaan maka pekerjaan2 yang dijalankan oleh penyeru2 agama itu tiadalah kena mengena dengan kerajaan melainkan boleh diumpamakan agama2 itu seperti anak dan kerajaan itu seperti ibu bapa iaitu
53 Neracha, 29, 8 Apr. 1912, p.1 54 Neracha, 67, 8 Jan. 1913, p.1
27
semuanya sama sahaja pada pandangannya maka bagaimana yang lainnya boleh mengajar dan menyeru kepada agamanya – begitu juga kita boleh menjalankan yang berkenaan dengan kewajipan agama kita seperti memberi ingat dan nasihat kepada kaum kita daripada tercebur kedalam pentas penyeru agama asing maka memberi ingat dan nasihat sememang2 telah dititahkan oleh Qur’an kita... 55
(‘Addin alNasihat’ [Religion is advice], Neracha, 109, 29 October 1913, p.1)
This measured outlook was, significantly, grounded in religion and Qur’anic
prescriptions. But for all its concern with manifesting and propagating a reading of
religion that would ensure success both in the present and in the hereafter, Neracha was
also a newspaper that kept its faith in its readers and its community, fully convinced of
the value of its programme in the Malay-Muslim world it operated in. Even as progress
was inevitable, it had to be anchored in faith and good deeds, without which it would be
of little value as these two extracts illustrate.
Maka pihak Bangsa Melayu yang kurang kepandaian dan pelajaran patutlah sudah daripada yang kecil martabat hingga yang besarnya sedar akan diri yang kita sama manusia bagaimana bangsa2 lain jua akan tetapi bangsa kita jatuh ke belakang pada hal bangsa2 yang lain2 telah jadi orang kayangan terbang diudara dan kejatuhan kita ialah daripada kurang usaha dan tiada berpengetahuan hendaklah dibangkitkan perasaan yang merajinkan berusaha dan menggemarkan menuntut ilmu dan kepandaian maka yang dikehendakkan daripada orang2 Melayu bukannya supaya berkepandaian boleh jadi syaitan manusia pada merosak binasakan bagaimana yang tersebut di atas itu melainkan yang dikehendak dan diserukan... ialah supaya mereka jadi kelak daripada bangsa yang terbilang dengan berusaha dan berpengetahuan tinggi setanding yang bagaimana lain2 bangsa hidup dengan bertingkah laku yang terpuji dan jauh daripada yang keji...56
(‘Kekerasan dan kebengisan manusia di dalam peperangan’[Violence and cruelty of man in war], Neracha, 187, 26 May 1915, p.1)
55 And the government not once interfering with the freedom of the various religions is due to its justice, hence the efforts that are carried out by missionaries of other religions have nothing to do with the government and it can be said that the religions are like children and the government like parents, that is, all are the same in its estimation. Hence just as others can teach and invite people to join their religion, so can we carry out the same like giving reminders and advice to our community from falling into the trap of missionaries, as our Qur’an has prescribed reminders and advice. 56 Thus the Malay Race which lacks intelligence and education should from the low in status to the elite realise that we are the same men just as other races, except that our race has fallen far behind. Whereas other races have become men of the heavens flying in the sky, our decline is from our lack of effort and not having knowlege. There must develop a sentiment that encourages diligence and inculcates a love for learning and intelligence. What is required from the Malays is not intelligence to become human devils that spoil and destroy as has been mentioned above but to do what is required and encouraged... to be among the races that are characterised by endeavour and a wealth of knowledge, on par with other races, living with commendable character and staying away from the despicable.
28
Dan sungguhpun berhenti Neracha ini tiadalah berasa sesal atau jemu daripada penat lelah dan kerugian kerana tujuan dan haluannya itu semata2 kebaikan bukannya kerana mencari hal kehidupan atau kekayaan dengan pekerjaan yang seumpama ini akan tetapi berkhidmat dan hendak mehidupkan ilmu dan menggemarkan supaya orang2 menuntut dan belajar dan sebagainya daripada kebajikan.57 (‘Kenyataan - Hendak diberhentikan Neracha ini’ [Statement – Neracha will cease publication], Neracha, 190, 16 June 1915, p.1)
57 Although Neracha will cease publication we feel no regrets or exhaustion or loss because its objective and orientation were to do good, not for us to seek a livelihood or riches, but to perform a service and generate knowledge and delight people to seek knowledge and perform similar good deeds.
29
Utusan Melayu: a critical loyalist
Utusan Melayu began publication in 1907 and served as a counterweight to Al-
Imam (1906-08). By the 1910s, it was published three times a week, on Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Saturdays. Like Neracha, it accorded prominent coverage to news of the
First Balkan War of 1912-1913. Yet in contrast to Neracha, it also covered news items of
broader interest, from crime news throughout Singapore and the Malay States to wire
reports on international stories of interest. Utusan was a Malay-language sister paper to
the Singapore Free Press, yet it was very much a paper in its own image by this period.
In competing for the support of the Malay community in this period, the financial
backing of the Singapore Free Press was crucial. Equally significant was support from
the colonial government, which allowed it to be used as a tool for Malay language
teaching in government schools – that two pages of every edition were in Rumi,
conceivably facilitated this. Its circulation was thus on average twice that of Neracha,
and almost the same as that of its publisher’s Singapore Free Press at 1200 copies. By
comparison, the bestselling The Straits Times had a circulation of 3000 from 1911-1913,
and 4000 for 1914 and 1915.58 Utusan’s editor in these years was Abdul Hamid bin
Miskin Sahib, who was described as one of the pioneers of the Malay press. 59 Abdul
Hamid, who was born in 1880, was involved with the paper from 1909 till 1918,
becoming its editor after pioneering editor Eunos Abdullah resigned.
Utusan declared that it was produced to provide the Malays in the Malay
Peninsula with updates and commentary on news and events from around the world, but
also with a journal in which Malays could debate various issues concerning themselves
58 Straits Settlements Blue Books, 1911-1915 59 Warta Malaya, 6th yr, 13, 16 Jan. 1935, p.12
30
so they could broaden their minds and views as to how they were being governed, on
their roles as citizens, and on the conditions of life in general.60 It also saw itself as a
pillar voicing sincere concerns on issues concerning Malay rights and privileges and
language, which, it reiterated, were its core intentions in producing the paper.
Consequently, it urged readers to not hold back or be reticent, shy or unconcerned, but to
be forthright in voicing their thoughts on these issues. The paper itself, it reiterated,
would readily make known its views concerning the progress and welfare of the
community.61 On both counts, Utusan performned commendably, and exceeded these
stated declarations in articulating its broader conception of how the community should
proceed on the path to modernity. But in bringing its readers all forms of news, it
declared its aim of also ‘soothing and pleasing the hearts of its readers’ (kerana hendak
menghibur dan menyukakan hati sekalian tuan2 pembacanya) in an editorial marking its
thousandth edition. That same editorial also acknowledged the support of the government
of the Straits Settlements and of the Federated Malay States, which enabled the paper to
continue being published and thereby serve its readers.62 Unlike Neracha whose primary
concern was with religion, Utusan openly declared that it was ‘not a religious newspaper’
(...bukan suratkhabar bagi ugama).63 It did not feature explicitly religious articles, and
covered broader social and political developments, notably crime news from Singapore
and the Peninsula, without a religious gloss. And although it was owned by the Singapore
Free Press, the paper had an editorial line of its own, which on the whole was upbeat
about the prospects of the Malays progressing into the modern world under colonial rule,
while at the same time critical of many aspects of that colonial rule, as well as of the
60 Utusan Melayu, 504, 18 Feb. 1911, p.1 61 Utusan Melayu, 822, 25 Mar. 1913, p.1 62 Utusan Melayu, 1000, 26 May 1914, p.1 63 Utusan Melayu, 15 Feb. 1908, cited in Milner, p.133
31
attitudes of the Malays in coping with that rule. Its correspondents were equally critical,
expressing a variety of views on various matters ranging from education to pan-Islamic
solidarity. There was no doubt that the editors did not publish all letters they received,
certainly not those that they found not constructive, that merely insulted and outrightly
criticised other correspondents.64 They did however carry a diversity of opinions from
that criticising Neracha and its polemical arguments (perbantahan) to that expressing
support for ‘our Islamic community’s government’ (kerajaan kaum Islam kita), Turkey,
in its war against Italy.65 One letter cited the merits of fundraising and a shared feeling
for Muslim fighters in Tripoli and Istanbul against foreign aggression, but also wondered
if that money was not better utilised in helping the community at home in building
madrasahs for the education of future generations, for instance.66 In the following edition,
a correspondent congratulated the Sultan of Perak on receiving a distinction from King
George V.67
Utusan’s view and vision of colonial rule was measured. It noted that the arrival
of the British, who had assisted the Malay rulers in administering their states, was ‘akin
to an act of mercy bestowed by God’ (seperti suatu rahmat besar yang diturunkan oleh
Tuhan) because their wise and just administration had developed these states. Roads and
railways had been built throughout the Peninsula from Seberang Prai in the North to
Johore Bahru in the South, and the paper noted that the wealth and prosperity that
accrued to states as Perak, Selangor and Negri Sembilan was like that which was
available in the territories directly under British rule – Singapore, Penang and Malacca.68
Tin and rubber had clearly made the Malay states prosperous, and the just rule of British
64 Utusan Melayu, 504, 18 Feb. 1911, p.1 65 Utusan Melayu, 954, 7 Feb. 1914, p.5, 965, 5 Mar. 1914, p.3 66 Utusan Melayu, 855, 12 June 1913, p.4 67 Utusan Melayu, 856, 14 June 1913, p.4 68 Utusan Melayu, 923, 22 Nov. 1913, p.1
32
officials in their administration had ensured that the fruits of prosperity and stability
filtered through to inhabitants and traders in those states. Even if many of those who
received much of this wealth were not Malays, the Malays nevertheless benefited from
the wealth and stability as well. For even if this was not greater than or similar to that
gained by outside races, their conditions were nevertheless better than in previous times.
An editorial listed in detail the inventions and developments which previous generations
were not able to experience – steamships, trains, cars, planes, bicycles, the post office, the
telegraph, gas and electricity, better clothing, cigarettes, lemonade, coffee, tea, pistols,
cannons.69 Utusan went further in articulating the importance of this development.
Hatta sesungguhpun segala yang tersebut di atas itu haruslah menyebabkan kita semua orang2 Melayu mengucap syukur kepada Tuhan oleh sebab rahmat yang telah dikurniainya itu tetapi adakah memadai dengan mengucap syukur sahaja dan membiarkan negeri2 tanah air kita sendiri tertinggal di dalam pemerintahan yang bergantung kepada bantuan dan pertolongan bangsa asing sahaja selama2nya. Tidakkah patut dan wajib bagi bangsa yang mempunyai negeri itu mencuba pada mencampurkan dirinya dalam pekerjaan memerintah akan negerinya sendiri tentu sekali patut. Tetapi adakah orang2 kita bangsa Melayu yang cukup layak yakni yang ada mempunyai pengetahuan sama seperti pengetahuan orang2 yang menjalankan pemerintahan negeri2 kita pada masa ini? Nampaknya tidak ada. Jika tidak betapakah boleh kita hendak menjalankan pekerjaan2 yang berkenaan dengan pemerintahan negeri2 itu. Dari sebab itu selagi kita ada dalam keadaan seperti yang ada pada masa ini dan tidak hendak menambah dan meninggikan pengetahuan kita dan anak2 kita nescaya tertinggallah kita selama2nya dalam keadaan yang ada ini dan jauhlah kita daripada segala syarat2 yang melayakkan kita boleh masuk ke dalam bilangan bangsa2 yang maju dan tamadun di dalam dunia ini.70 (Utusan Melayu, 923, 22 November 1913, p.1)
69 Utusan Melayu, 951, 31 Jan. 1914, p.1 70 What has been mentioned above should make all of us Malays express our thanks to God for the mercy that he has bestowed upon us. But is it enough to be thankful alone and leave the states of our own motherland to remain under an administration that depends on the assistance and favours of foreign races alone forever? Is it not fitting and seemly that the race to which these states belong tries to involve itself in the business of administering them?/But are our people the Malays of sufficient capability, possessing knowledge comparable to that held by those administering our states at present? It seems not. If so, how then are we to carry out the business of administration? So long as we are in our current condition and do not want to enhance our knowledge and that of our children, then forever will we be left in this condition, far from the prerequisites that would justify our entry into the ranks of the advanced and civilised races of this world.
33
Four key elements of the general slant of the paper’s editors are revealed in this
forceful editorial. First, the editors put things in perspective, comparing the material
benefits of their age to that of their parents’ age, noting that although the immigrant races
gained much from the states’ prosperity so did the Malays. In a modern era the Malays
lacked sufficient skills to effectively administer their own affairs and had much to learn
about fair and just governance from the British. Second, they acknowledged and
recognised that religion mattered, that crucial to the Malay mind and understanding of the
world was a sense of belief in God, albeit a belief that again had to be seen in perspective.
Thus the benefits of just governance were possible under British rule, there was therefore
reason to be grateful to God for this blessing. Third, they articulated a proto-nationalism
and an interest in the affairs and welfare of the Malay community. The language
employed urged Malay readers to think of themselves as a communal whole, and to view
the states they lived in as their possessions, which ultimately they should themselves
govern. More than that, it advanced the notion of tanah air (motherland) around which
Malay concerns for development ought to centre, as a place where the progressive Malay
would make his home and govern himself according to modern standards as exemplified
by the British. The Malays were seen to be as capable as the other advanced races of the
world, and Utusan desired their entry into the ranks of these developed races.71 Fourth,
they had a clear and confident view of development. The Malays had to acquire the
knowledge and capabilities required to govern states and their resources well, because
development was a prerequisite for civilization. The benefits of British civilization were
evident, and the Malays had to match up to this. These four themes are evident in the
paper’s editorials over this period.
71 Utusan Melayu, 1000, 26 May 1914, p.1
34
Utusan’s bold and vocal stance in articulating the aforementioned points in its
pages was evident. The editors spoke their mind and often commended the benefits of
British residents and administrators, while scathing against misplaced, untruthful
representations of British rule such as those of Ahmad bin Ambac, a Singaporean who
taught at the foreign languages institute in Tokyo, Japan who at a club noted the suffering
of the Malays under British rule, cited British insincerity in promoting education for the
Malays, and suggested that the Japanese relieve them from their present predicament.72
What oppression had the British perpetuated, Utusan asked angrily, what more when if
the British were insincere, the learned scholar could travel to Japan and teach the Malay
language there? The paper thought Ahmad had been influenced by Indians’ sentiment
against the British at that meeting, and hoped that in future he would be more considerate
and thoughtful on the matter. At the same time, the editors were unrelenting in suggesting
that the Malays ought to be as good as the British were in order to progress – to learn
from the example set by foreign races in striving and finding employment and in
administration so that in a short while they could ‘do as other races did without
depending upon them to initiate and preserve the prosperity of their (Malay) states’
(dapatlah kita berbuat seperti bangsa2 luar itu dengan tiada bergantung kepada dia
semua pada menerbitkan dan mengekalkan kemakmuran negeri2 kita di sini).73
The paper’s correspondents were thus critical of the British for restricting certain
administrative positions available to Malays in the Peninsula.
Adalah agaknya fikiran kerajaan sekarang belum ada daripada bangsa Melayu yang layak memegang jawatan nazir itu jika demikian sudahkah disudi kepandaian anak2 Melayu sekarang? Pada tahun2 dahulu bangsa Inggeris sahaja yang menjadi Settlement Officer (Pemeriksa Sempadan) sekarang sudah boleh
72 Utusan Melayu, 859, 21 June 1913, p.1 73 Utusan Melayu, 596, 28 Sept. 1911, p.1
35
Melayu membuat pekerjaan itu dan kita harap supaya Melayu pun boleh jua memegang jawatan inspektor itu adanya.74 (Utusan Melayu, 859, 21 June 1913, p.4)
The paper had a clear idea about its vision of the immediate future for the Malays
and for Malaya. Commenting on the proposed donation of a warship by the sultans of the
Federated Malay States to the British war effort in 1913, an editorial noted that the
sultans were doing what had been done by larger states such as Australia, Canada, South
Africa and New Zealand. The intended comparison was evident – the Malay states were
seen as having come into their own as advanced colonies of the British Empire.75 While
expressing reservations that such a significant gift should only be embarked upon after
the welfare of the residents of these states had been seen to, the paper clearly saw itself as
a key player in not only guiding the Malays on the path to modernity, but in being loyal
citizens of the British Empire. The implication of the editorial on the gift of the warship
was evident. Although the Malays had some way to go before they could be as capable as
the Britons and presumably as the administrators of the White Dominions were, they
were certainly as loyal subjects of the King as were citizens of these dominions. In a note
rarely heard in the indigenous press in colonial territories, an editorial on Kelantan’s
joining the Federated Malay States was upbeat about the prospects of an extension of
formal British administration to the then-unfederated Malay States.
Dari semenjak dijadikan persekutuan itu telah bertambah2 kemakmuran di dalam negeri itu dan sekalian isi negeri2 pun duduk di dalam bertambah2 kesentosaan dan kesukaan.76
(Utusan Melayu, 978, 4 April 1914, p.1)
74 Does the government now think there are no Malays fit to hold the post of inspector (of schools) and if so is the intelligence of Malay youth now satisfactory? In previous years only Englishmen could become Settlement Officers now Malays can take up the post and we hope that Malays can soon hold the post of inspector. 75 Utusan Melayu, 768, 12 Nov. 1912, p.1 76 From the formation of the Federation its member states have seen an increase in prosperity and all in them live in increased tranquility and comfort.
36
At the outbreak of war, the paper also demonstrated its loyalty to the Crown,
reiterating the benefits of colonial rule and taking pains to point out that the war was not
a war against Islam or a crusade as viewed by certain quarters in the Muslim world,
quoting Snouck Hurgronje who pointed out the incongruity of a non-Muslim power –
Germany – asking the Muslims to ensure the success of a crusade, moreover, in doing so
they would also be fighting other Muslims themselves.77 It highlighted the munificence
of the British in ensuring the welfare of pilgrims in India, stating that this revealed their
government was sincere in assisting them in their hardship, what more in the matter of a
pillar of their faith.78 When a renegade troop of Indian Muslims began a short-lived
mutiny in Singapore in February 1915, Utusan publicised a public meeting of Muslims in
Singapore held to reaffirm the community’s loyalty to the Crown, with the community
sending a note to the King stating that the loyalty of Singapore Muslims to his rule
remained as steadfast as it had been before the outbreak of war. Utusan had already
underlined its commitment to the Crown much earlier, when it asked its readers to pray
for British victory.
Maka berdoalah kita kehadrat Tuhan supaya melanjutkan dengan berkekalan akan kejayaan2 bagi pihak Inggeris itu.79 (Utusan Melayu, 1036, 15 August 1914, p.1)
77 Utusan Melayu, 1110, 11 Feb. 1915, p.1 78 Utusan Melayu, 1025, 25 July 1914, p.1 79 Let us pray to God to eternally ensure victory for the British side.
37
Utusan’s Core Concerns
Utusan, like Neracha, was a campaigning paper. Its campaigns, however, pursued
different trajectories to those of its counterpart. Where Neracha campaigned mainly
against Christianisation and football, and in favour of the Jawi script, Utusan invoked
pragmatism. It highlighted the broader missionary contribution to medical care and
education and took a gentler approach to football, but was equally insistent and vocal in
its editorials and campaigns to rationalise the community’s interests and sketch out its
vision of how the Malays could progress, not least through education.
In an editorial on female doctors in the Malacca Medical Mission, who had
allegedly been proselytising by offering free medical services, Utusan noted that such
allegations were erroneous. What the doctors had said in their defence, that truly no
medicine or assistance would have an effect were it not with God’s sanction, was true,
and furthermore, the doctors said they did not proselytise to Muslims they administered
to. The paper advocated that Muslims contribute to the doctors’ efforts instead, as many
Christians and the government had already extended financial and material support given
that medicine and the running of clinics involved significant costs. Interestingly, just as
Neracha had published lists of donors towards medical assistance for the Turkish war
wounded, Utusan indicated it would publish the names of donors, so that others would be
encouraged to contribute as well – this suggests how much the community had been
affected by capitalist modernity in requiring material inducement to be charitable,
contrary to religious as well as traditional practice. Yet the papers also appealed to a
deeper sense of charity, and Utusan noted it was worthy to support the cure of the sick.80
80Utusan Melayu, 912, 25 Oct. 1913, p.1
38
Differently from Neracha, Utusan put the issue of the Malay passion for football
in a broader perspective. It did not see the rapid establishment of football clubs as an
issue that created divisions in the community just because supporters of rival clubs
occasionally found themselves in post-match brawls, or as an unnecessary preoccupation,
but regarded the clubs’ emergence as a helpful first step in shifting the Malays’ attentions
from living in disagreement and enmity, to co-operating and working together, which
were regarded as necessary to meaningful progress. A correspondent noted:
Jauh daripada berfikir futbol itu merosakkan bangsa kita sahaya rasa adalah ia suatu tanda juga bagi kemajuan kita. Tetapi hendaklah ahli-ahlinya ingat maksud kita berhimpun-himpun mengadakan kelab-kelab dan association itu ialah menghendaki muafakat yang sempurna menurut aturan tertib.... Alhamdulillah, sekarang sudah mula-mula kita mengetahui muafakat meskipun muafakat bermain-main sahaja mudah-mudahan tiada lama masanya lagi kita pandai pula bermuafakat menambahi kepandaian itu beransur-ansur sedikit-sedikit lama-lama sampai ke atas.81
(Utusan Melayu, 835, 24 April 1913)
Utusan proactively called for Malay participation in public life, and railed against
the apathy of the Malays. It urged more Malays to attend public Municipal Council
meetings, to join the police, and called for public support in its assertion of Malay rights
and support for political organisation to bring about change. A clear failing of its
community in Singapore, be it just the Malays or including other Muslim races, the paper
noted, was in not being concerned with the politics and administration of the colony,
whether in campaigning for their rights or voicing out their views and concerns on
policies as other races did. After all, the paper argued, they paid taxes to the government
and municipal administration.82 It railed against the community for its dismal attendance
at a public meeting in September 1913. When the colony was evidently a Malay land 81 Far from destroying our race, I regard football as an indicator of our progress. But players need to remeber that our purpose in coming together to form clubs and associations is to create mutual benefit along proper lines. Thank God, now we begin to see the benefits of forming associations even if just to play sport, and shortly may we learn to work together and increase our adeptness in co-operating to attain greater heights. 82 Utusan Melayu, 594, 21 Sept. 1911, p.1
39
before and when Malays were still a significant constituency, they should have a say in
public matters; but if having had the chance to do so they do not bother to ensure their
rights, then then how would these accrue to them? What Utusan’s editors had in mind
was clear – and the editors said as much: the administration would not go running after
the Malays to seek out their opinions if they did not stand up for themselves. Because the
Malays were not vocal, many from the other races thought the Muslim population had no
stake in the administration of Singapore, and they were left behind as foreigners in their
own land. All the Muslims did was to complain about the inflexibility of legislative
initiatives when the reality was they did not bother contributing towards them when they
could.83 On its part, the paper did what it could. When new legislation requiring deaths to
be certified was introduced, Utusan explained the difficulties this might entail for Muslim
burial, especially when the corpse had to be kept overnight at times. The editors
expressed their hope that the members of the Municipal Council would take this into
account and ensure that officers issuing this certification would arrive as soon as they
could upon receiving notice of death.84 As Utusan urged its readers to utilise government
disease facilities, it urged the authorities to be mindful of Muslim sensitivities in these
institutions, foremost when it came to dietary requirements and cleanliness for Muslim
patients.85 The paper also publicised a public meeting of the Muslim community
convened in 1913 to discuss its proposed lobbying of the government to make Hari Raya
Puasa, the day following the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, a public
holiday. The government did not recognise it as a public holiday when it should have
owing to pressures from the business community which feared the loss of a working day,
but a number of Europeans shared Muslims’ sentiment that a holiday was deserved. Just
83 Ibid. 84 Utusan Melayu, 863, 1 July 1913, p.1 85 Utusan Melayu, 851, 31 May 1913, p.1
40
because a community was united and mobilised to effect change did not mean they were
fighting the government or committing an offence, the editors pointed out, in effect they
were stating their demands just so the government would be aware of their wishes and
negotiate these wishes.86 Utusan was satisfied with the outcome of that meeting,
highlighting it as an instance of what could be accomplished through co-operation and
community-wide consensus. The editors noted, it would be notable (istimewa) if the
meeting did not result in a downgrading (kecelaan) of the reputation of the Malay race
because such a step was taken only out of consideration for the improvement of its
general welfare, not for the interests of those who had worked to organise the meeting.
Furthermore, no distinction was made between the wealthy and the less well-off at the
meeting, for all had equal right to speak their thoughts. The editorial went on to note that
governments that were just in governing all over the world sought popular opinion in
deliberating on a contentious issue, because the situation of a government is ‘as a
representative of its residents’ (seperti wakil bagai orang2 yang di dalam negerinya), and
hoped that consequently the government would consider the community’s concerns
fairly, especially as it involved the Malays ‘who were indigenous to the colony and who
were in a state of constant weakness and backwardness’ (yang ternak bagai negeri ini
dan yang senantiasa ada dalam keadaan yang lemah lagi daif itu). The meeting, Utusan
hoped, would serve as a lasting model for Muslims in the colony to co-operate and have
consensual sentiment (sebulat fikirannya) on matters affecting its welfare.87
Utusan had its take on Islam and (limited) democracy – the editors noted, civic
participation had its roots in the Muslim faith. Undoubtedly, reference to scripture and
early Islamic precedents was part of the paper’s appeal to its core constituency of Malay-
86 Utusan Melayu, 891, 6 Sept. 1913, p.1 87 Utusan Melayu, 894, 13 Sept. 1913, p.1
41
Muslim readers – a legitimising tool that was also heavily influenced by the editors’ own
convictions that Islam was a guide to modernity and that Islam’s history contained
invaluable lessons on securing success in the modern world. Above and beyond this, the
paper argued that Muslims should reconsider their notions of Islam being incompatible
with modern methods of government, noting that on matters concerning the welfare of
all, no one person or group had more right to a voice than others, because the voice of the
public gathering was that which was considered important by civilised and just
governments.
Maka saksi yang besar sekali dalam hal ini ialah dalam beberapa masa yang orang Islam masih lagi menurut akan teladan yang dijalankan pada zaman Nabi kita Muhammad saw iaitu senantiasa bermuafakat dan menggunakan fikiran orang2 ramai besarlah nama kerajaan2 Islam tetapi dari semenjak telah berpecah belah muafakat itu dan digunakan fikiran raja2 dan menterinya sahaja hancur luluhlah nama kerajaan2 Islam seperti yang ada pada masa ini dan porak-perandalah rakyat negerinya bertabur-tebar merata2 negeri di dalam dunia ini masing2 fikirannya sendiri dan mendewa akan kebesaran nama bangsanya dalam masa dahulukala itu seolah2 seumpama ayam2 sabong yang telah patah tajinya berkokok akan tuahnya sahaja.88
(Utusan Melayu, 897, 20 September 1913, p.1) Utusan lent due emphasis to issues of Malay identity and security, and explored
the underdevelopment of the Malays. An editorial noted that when one race protected or
governed other races, a major difficulty is that ‘each race perceives that the others should
have a common perception on any matter’ (tiap2 bangsa itu hendak bersetuju fikirannya
diatas sesuatu perkara sama seperti yang difikirkan oleh bangsa yang lain itu jua) – thus
to the Englishman who worked hard and saved up, those who did not do as he did were
on an erroneous path. This, the paper noted, was why Europeans who were not as well
informed frequently described the Malays as lazy and unwilling to help themselves. In 88 The best instance in this matter is when Muslims were following the example of the Prophet Muhammad, when they were constantly co-operating and considering the opinions of the masses, and the reputation of the Muslim governments was notable. But when that consensus was broken and only the views of kings and ministers were listened to, that reputation was lost as in this day and its citizens lost direction throughout the nations of the world, each having their own views and stressing the achievements of their race in the past, like cocks who have lost their claws but who continue crowing about their fate only.
42
reality, Utusan commented, these Europeans did not realise that the Malays were content
with their condition, and it was the Europeans who wanted more and consequently were
driven to work harder for more money.89 As Alatas notes, what the Malays lacked was
not the will to work but the will to acquire greater and greeater wealth in the Western
capitalist sense. The Malays were judged to be opposed to steady work because they
avoided colonial capitalist ventures.90 Utusan did not however deride the Malays – it
ventured that people in India and China shared a similar outlook to the Malays, but
because of overpopulation in these countries there was a lack of agricultural land, and
consequently, people were forced to work hard in producing goods to buy food. This led
to the Europeans perceiving that the Indians and Chinese were far more diligent than the
Malays were. The remedy to racial disagreement on this level, the paper ventured, was
that each race ought to try to learn about what conditioned other races’ outlook to life, as
this would prevent them from being angry with others out of their own failings in not
understanding different approaches to life and to work.91 Alatas captured this sentiment
in a more direct manner in the 1970s, questioning the expectation that Malays should
hasten to the mines and estates, when their life in the villages offered them greater
satisfaction. Utusan understood that the generic Malay lifestyle of contentment and ease
was not enough. Education and land ownership were two significant socio-economic
indicators that showed the Malays were being left behind in continuing with their current
way of life. It was with this concern that the paper therefore exhorted its readership to
campaign and be involved in public affairs, and to also seek an accommodation with
changing circumstances.
89 Utusan Melayu, 882, 14 Aug. 1913, p.1 90 Syed Hussein Alatas, The Myth of the Lazy Native (London, 1977), pp. 213-215 91 Utusan Melayu, 882, 14 Aug. 1913, p.1
43
Its editors led the way in defining and in defending a sentiment of Malayness.
Utusan articulated the Malay definition of progress, criticising those who lagged behind.
An editorial noted how Europeans’ writings highlighting Malays’ indolence in contrast to
the labour of Chinese and Indian immigrants were read all over the world, thus it was
widely known that the Malays were a lazy race who loved ease and contentment, who
had no hopes or ambitions for wealth other than to have enough to live life day by day.
Was it any wonder, the editors asked, that foreign races looked down on all Malays,
refusing to believe that they were as capable as the Chinese and other races who ran
farms, traded in various goods and saved up to guarantee wealth and contentment in old
age and to repatriate their earnings home. The editors voiced their disagreement with
these conclusions on the Malays, because they knew that these commentators, a number
of whom were government officers in the Federated Malay States, did not really know
the Malays. These writers only observed Malays in these states’ towns, not those who
were to be found working industriously gardening, farming and in various occupations in
Kelantan, Trengganu, Malacca and other states. But the editors had a deeper motive for
highlighting these perceptions of the Malays.
Tetapi maksud kita menulis ini ialah supaya segala sangka2 orang2 bangsa asing itu dapat diketahui oleh orang2 kita Melayu yang suka melatu di jalan2 raya dan menghabiskan masanya di kedai2 kopi dan di rumah bola pada setiap hari itu dan dengan sebab itu diberhentikannya tabiat yang memberi malu kepada bangsanya ramai itu dan mencuba pada berusaha dan bekerja mencari kehidupannya bagaimana yang dilakukan oleh saudaranya yang lain.92 (Utusan Melayu, 928, 4 December 1913, p.1)
The ultimate irony of all this was perhaps bound up with the implicit paradox of
the paper’s proto-nationalism – that the Malays had a distinct sense of identity, but that
92 Our intention in highlighting this is so that what foreigners believe about us Malays is known by those of us who like to loiter on the streets and while away their time at coffee houses and football clubs every day. Hopefully they will end these dispositions that bring shame to their race, and instead they will strive and work for a living as their other brothers are doing.
44
they had to catch up with the modern world to maintain their way of life. Yet in being
modern, the very definition of Malayness was inevitably and irretrievably altered. This
was evident in the paper’s coverage of education. The paper consistently highlighted the
achievements and efforts of individuals who contributed to the educational development
of the community in their efforts to help it into the modern world. Mohamed Ismail
Saheb, previously a student and teacher at the Raffles School, had completed his studies
in law in England in 1911 where he received several distinctions, and Utusan stated that
his achievement was a source of pride to the community, more so when he was not on
any scholarship but supported himself on his own efforts and strong will. His
accomplishment should, an editorial ran, be an example to the community whose children
were in school, because intelligence and knowledge could be accomplished ‘if there was
effort and significant support’ (jika ada usaha dan tinggi hemah) from parents – only
accomplishments like Mohamed Ismail’s could elevate the reputation and condition of
the Malays, therefore the community should try its best to increase its numbers of the
well-educated, such as by pooling its resources together to support such individuals.93
The papers’ editors had views on studying abroad, and Europe was held up as a model of
progress and development, but also as a means to acquire respect and status for the Malay
race in the colonial world order. Yet Utusan was not always cosying up to the
government or sharing a similar political view of development. Commenting on an
announcement that the government had great hopes for the Malay College in Kuala
Kangsar (regarded as the Malay Eton), which would educate Malay youth to enable them
to participate in the administration of their own states, Utusan’s editors were glad that the
British had intentions of grooming young Malays for such duties alongside British
officials. Yet the editors were also sceptical about the extent to which such involvement 93 Utusan Melayu, 565, 15 July 1911, p.1
45
was desired, and questioned how far young Malays ‘could get involved in the business of
administration, to what rank and in what areas of work?’94 The editors observed that
many graduates from Kuala Kangsar were inducted as trainees in various government
departments of the Federated Malay States, but doubted that the skills and knowledge
garnered at the college exceeded or even matched up to that possessed by British officals,
and wondered how these graduates could then reach these officials’ level. The paper
therefore urged the government to ensure, if it truly wished the Malays to run their states
as well as the British did, that these Malay graduates received comparable instruction –
those those deemed capable should further their education in England and subsequently
sit qualifying examinations taken by aspirants to government positions in the Straits
Settlements and Malay States. Malays who had truly proven their mettle could then be on
par with European officials, and only then would it be ascertained whether or not Malays
could run their states ‘according to the expectations of the present order’ (menurut
perjalanan tamadun sekarang ini).95
Another editorial cited a speech made by Dr Lim Boon Keng at the Civil Service
Club in Johore, that the editors noted revealed what the other races thought of the
condition of the Malays, as well as what the Malays therefore ought to do to uplift its
image and prepare it to compete with races that had progressed and prospered in the
modern era.96 The editors reiterated their hope that those running the Malay states wanted
to see the Malays prosper, while revealing their anger that not enough was being done to
further that direction.
Telah beberapa kali kita menulis di dalam akhbar ini mengatakan jika sesungguhpun pihak yang menjalankan pemerintahan2 negeri2 Melayu itu suka hendak melihat akan kemajuan bangsa Melayu yang diperintahnya itu haruslah
94 Utusan Melayu, 597, 30 Sept. 1911, p.1 95 Ibid. 96 Utusan Melayu, 874, 26 July 1913, p.1
46
diadakannya pelajaran yang berkenaan dengan perusahaan lain daripada pelajaran di sekolah yang ada pada masa ini tetapi nampaknya perkataan2 kita itu tiada sekali2 memberi bekas sehingga pada masa ini”.97 (Utusan Melayu, 874, 26 July 1913, p.1) Yet they did not hold back from suggesting how the government could win over
the Malays, such as by supporting schools that were recently established to teach Arabic,
the language of the Qur’an and of Muslim scholarship, even though English was the
language of administration. The editors noted that government spending on education and
the Malay language in hundreds of Malay schools in the Malay states (it is doubtful that
the editors knew of colonial policy objectives to restrict English language education to an
elite) when Malay was not used in most government departments had received the
support of Malays.98 The editors therefore hoped that if similar initiatives cropped up in
future, state governments would not hesitate to encourage them.
The paper was also critical of the manner in which the Malays had been
marginalised by the appropriation of their land. It grudgingly accepted the 1913 Malay
Reservations Enactment, which created reserves in the Federated Malay States that could
not be sold or leased to non-Malays and which was instituted as a means to protect the
Malays from further divestment of their land. Noting that the damage had been done,
Utusan highlighted and lamented the plight of the Malays in Singapore.
Hatta cubalah lihat keadaan orang2 Melayu kita yang di dalam Singapura ini bagaimana mereka itu telah terhambat hingga ke tepi hutan daripada tempat kedudukan mereka yang asal di dalam bandar dengan berumah tangga yang setirehat dan pada masa ini mereka itu diam pada daerah2 hutan itu di dalam rumah2 yang dibangunkan tersangat rapat di antara sebuah dengan sebuah dan kerap kali tiada berhalaman... Mereka terpaksa jalan jauh ke bandar jika mereka bekerja di dalam bandar... mereka itu membayar sewa rumah 8 atau 10 ringgit…
97 This paper has several times noted that if the authorities administering the Malay states desire the success of the Malay race under their administration, then they should provide education that is relevant to industry above that which is currently provided in schools. It seems that our words have not hitherto had an effect at all. 98 Utusan Melayu, 865, 5 July 1913, p.1
47
Pada fikiran kita barangkali sekarang ini telah terlambat sangat pada melakukan sebarang ikhtiar di dalam Singapura ini.99
(Utusan Melayu, 1006, 11 June 1914, p.1)
The editors were of the view that if the Malays wanted to maintain the integrity of
their race and their way of life (jalan kehidupannya), they needed to find a way to release
themselves from having to live by renting shophouses. There had to be assistance, the
paper suggested, to allocate special rent for houses built according to the Malay scheme
of things, with compounds for small gardens and with rent appropriate to the location of
these houses, which would be healthier than shophouses were. As it was difficult to
obtain reserve land in the city, the only spaces for these would conceivably be in the
outlying areas.
Utusan also played a role in the conflict between Neracha and Al-Ittihad. The
dispute between these two papers’ respective editors was chided by correspondents for
causing fitna (dissension). One noted that the harm both had caused the community
outweighed their benefits, that both papers were a letdown to sensible readers. In turn, he
was rebuked by another correpondent for trying to put down the two Muslim-oriented
papers.100 Utusan gave fair space to these differing views while not directly intervening
in the dispute, highlighting its role as a forum for varying conceptions of the role of
religion in the community’s development. Nevertheless, Utusan lamented the closure of
Neracha with regret. It had previously been upbeat about the arrival of its ideological
rival, welcoming the latter’s emergence immediately preceding Neracha’s first edition in
99 Consider the condition of our Malays in Singapore, how they have been sidelined to the edge of the forests from their original places of residence in the city with their households, able to rest well. Now they live in forested areas in houses built so close together and often without compounds... They are forced to walk long distances to the city if they work there… they pay rent for their houses of 8 or 10 dollars. In our opinion, it is now too late to embark on any initiative to alter this in Singapore. 100 Utusan Melayu, 942, 948, 950-1, 953: 10, 24, 29, 31, Jan. 1914, 5 Feb. 1914
48
1911 as ‘evidence that the Malay race had yet to wither’ (bukti “bangsa Melayu belum
layu”).101
Adalah sahabat kita Neracha itu bolehlah diumpamakan seperti penyuluh bagi bangsa dan agamanya kerana tiada pernah sekali pun di dalam ruangannya itu kosong dengan perhiasan nasihat-nasihat dan fikiran yang berharga. Maka pemberhentian Neracha itu menjadikan suatu kehilangan kepada kita dan demikian juga kepada pembantu-pembantunya yang telah ditinggalkan bagi sementara oleh perasaan kasih sayang di atas kaum dan bangsanya itu.102 (Utusan Melayu, 1162, 19 June 1915, p.3)
Seen in this light, Utusan was conciliatory to Neracha in the end. It recognised
that it was engaged in a dialogue over the legitimacy of its proposals and strategies for its
community as was Neracha. But even as it was aggressively modern in its line to push
the Malays into the modern world, it held fast to Malay adat (custom) more effectively
than Neracha perhaps did. There was no need to brag about the decline of an alternative
paper, which was not so much regarded as a competitor as a debate partner. After all, the
debate that they were engaged in was not a contest over whose ideas were better received
– Utusan recognised, more so than Neracha did, that a strong explanation for its
continued support lay in its being able to manifest a deep affection for its race and
community without alienating that same and very critical constituency.
101 Utusan Melayu, 14 Mar. 1911, cited in Abdul Rahman Haji Ismail, ‘Neraca “Menendang” Bola’, Kajian Malaysia, 9(1), Jun. 1992, 56 102 Our brother Neracha can be compared to a light for its race and religion because not once have its columns been devoid of invaluable advice and thought. Its closure is a loss to us and to its assistants who have temporarily been deprived, with their feeling of deep affection for their race and community.
49
Contrasting Visions of Modernity
On the day of reckoning, a Muslim belief holds, men’s deeds in this world will be
weighed on the scales, al-mizan (Arabic), or neracha (Malay), of good and evil.
Neracha’s intention, as its name implied, and which unfortunately may never be
decisively ascertained as no early editions of Neracha (the earliest available copy being
the 28th edition) have surfaced, was to weigh the scales in Singapore and Malaya in
favour of what it deemed in the interests of the Malay-Muslims. Unfortunately, the scales
in 1915 were weighted in favour of the worldview that Utusan subscribed to. The papers’
print runs are the only available if inadequate quantitative indicator of their success. In
1911, Utusan’s average print run was 1050 while Neracha’s was 700. By 1914, the year
before Neracha folded up with no successor of a similar ilk to follow in its footsteps as it
did in Al-Imam’s, Utusan’s print run stood at 1200 whereas Neracha’s was only 500.103
While Utusan’s use for instruction in government schools stood in its favour (it continued
publication till 1921), the gap in the papers’ readerships remains the best indicator of the
popularity of their worldviews and of the stances they adopted.
Both papers’ editors and writers expressed their sentiments and vision of what
modernity should be for the Malays. Both papers took the debate about a vision of the
Malay future beyond the debate on kerajaan or royal government. The Sultans were, as
both papers reported them, marginal if still respected figures in colonial politics, but they
were no longer active determinants of what the future would be. Life in the Malay states,
which remained sultanates, was featured, but more as news items – the Sultans were left
behind. Singapore was the hub of the Malay world and of its immediate future – with the
city as their springboard, both papers were essentially concerned with looking at, 103 Straits Settlements Blue Books, 1911-1915
50
understanding and attempting to navigate the world in a new light. How they did so was
what differentiated them. While both papers claimed to benefit the Malays, and while
their readerships and correspondents did overlap, their readers and the Malays throughout
the Peninsula but especially in Singapore, were rather adeptly presented with two visions
of coping with the situation the Malays found themselves in – urbanisation,
marginalisation, and alienation by colonial authority.
The tension between adat (custom) and agama (religion) has been regarded as a
divisive element in Malay society, but these papers went beyond that tension. Both
advocated a modern work ethic, and an adoption of the new adat (custom) of
development and progress. For both papers, only the Malays themselves could determine
their own future, and the papers offered their contrasting paths to that future as a
refraction of their two visions – one with religion dominating modernity, the other with
religion moderating it. It was a contrast that had deepened since Al-Imam and Utusan first
postulated their differing takes on the way forward and by 1915, it was a difference over
which Utusan had prevailed.
Why was this so? Three reasons can be advanced. First, even in the context of
1910s British Malaya, Neracha was more radical and strident in its tone and in espousing
its editorial line while Utusan was more balanced in its tone. Neracha was harsh,
uncompromising and stern, while Utusan was gentle, guarded and measured. But both
were equally radical to the Malays, Neracha for its pan-Islamic views and Utusan for its
espousal of a Hegelian view of progress. Both strongly advocated that their readers think
as individuals, use their reason and debate and challenge commonly accepted ideas and
views. Neracha, like Al-Imam, contained a good deal of self-condemnation and self-
vilification – it traced the state of affairs of the Malay community to internal weakness,
and its stance can, like its predecessor’s, be described as ‘the agonised intellectualisation
51
of reformists throughout the colonial-dominated world, symptomatic of their cultural and
religious revivalism’.104 But at the same time, colonial authority was not to be shunned or
repressive, it was ‘indifferent, uncaring and niggardly’.105 Utusan tried to change this
facet of that authority.
Second, both papers took their sides for and against colonial rule. Neracha was on
the less desirable side at the time, while Utusan was on the safer side. Of course, the
financial strength Utusan derived from being owned by the Singapore Free Press cannot
be discounted, whereas Neracha very often struggled financially and eventually folded up
due to financial difficulties. Utusan, meanwhile, was exploring the Enlightenment
ideologies of Europe – individualism, race, progress, nation, citizenship, and
participatory governance. Neracha was utilising similar concepts but insisted on
providing an alternative programme of reform – that which drew heavily upon the
shari’a, but which at times represented a far cry from what the Malays in Singapore and
in the Peninsula were commonly accustomed to. Neracha went further than Utusan did in
its critique of liberal tradition, of living for the day, synonymous with the Malay adage
‘kais pagi makan pagi, kais petang makan petang’ – and this leads on to the third factor
for why Neracha lost its readers’ faith.
Neracha was essentially negative. Utusan was hopeful. It is this that crucially
ensured Utusan’s continued readership and enabled its ideas and arguments to resonate –
and to engage the Malay reading public to consider its platform. In an uncertain world in
which the prospects facing the community seemed bleak, the vision that offered greater
promise – that of a more accommodating and attractive path to worldly betterment – held
out better.
104 Edwin Lee, The British as Rulers (Singapore, 1991), p. 264 105 Ibid., p.268
52
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Hooker, Virginia Matheson, Writing a new society: social change through the novel in Malay, Leiden, KITLV Press, 2001 Hunt, Robert, ‘Inter-Religious Conflict and Compromise in Late 19th and Early 20th Century Singapore’, Sejarah: Jurnal Jabatan Sejarah Universiti Malaya, 4, 1996, 63-81 Khoo Kay Kim, ‘Islam in Malaysia: a view of the pre-1941 scenario’, Jurnal Fakulti Sastera, Sains Sosial, Universiti Malaya, 6, Jun 1990, 15-36 Khoo Kay Kim, Malay papers and periodicals as historical sources, with a list of pre-merdeka periodicals, Kuala Lumpur, Bahagian Koleksi Kebangsaan Perpustakaan Universiti Malaya, 1984 Khoo, Kay Kim, ‘Malay society, 1874-1920s’, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 5 (2), 1974, 179-98 Laffan, Michael Francis, Islamic Nationhood and Colonial Indonesia: The Umma Below the Winds, London, Routledge Curzon, 2003 Lee, Edwin, The British as Rulers: Governing Multiracial Singapore 1867-1914, Singapore, Singapore University Press, 1991 Mohd. Sarim Hj. Mustajab, ‘Neraca 1910-Jun 1915: Penyambung Nafas Islah Al-Imam’, Jurnal Budaya Melayu, 3 (1), 1978, 93-107 Md. Sidin Ahmad Ishak and Mohammad Redzuan Othman, The Malays in the Middle East, with a bibliography of Malay printed works published in the Middle East, Kuala Lumpur, University of Malaya Press, 2000 Milner, Anthony, The Invention of Politics in Colonial Malaya, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1995 Noer, Deliar, The Modernist Muslim Movement in Indonesia 1900-1942, Kuala Lumpur, Oxford University Press, 1973 Nik Ahmad Nik Hassan, ‘The Malay Press’, Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 36 (1), 1963, 37-73 Proudfoot, Ian, ‘Pre-war Malay Periodicals: notes to Roff's bibliography drawn from government gazettes’, Kekal Abadi, 4 (4) Dec 1985, 1-28 Rahim, Lily Zubaidah, The Singapore Dilemma, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1998 Roff, William R., The Origins of Malay Nationalism, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1967 Soenarno, Radin, ‘Malay Nationalism, 1896-1941’, Journal of Southeast Asian History, 1(1), 1960, 1-28
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