Sunday, May 24, 2009

Nothing wrong with ‘Dayak’

By Doreena Naeg

The term ‘Dayak’ is historically as old as the existence of the people so named and not coined by the colonial powers

SARAWAK’S rich racial diversity forms a unique backdrop that helps define the state’s character.

Among its 2.4 million people, comprising a total of 27 ethnic tribes and other racial groups, a total of 45 languages and dialects are being spoken.

The state’s indigenous communities form a large chunk of its population with the Iban (700,000) taking the lead, followed by the Bidayuh (197,000), the Orang Ulu and the Melanau (137,000).

Further sub-divided into the Jagoi, Biatah, Bukar-Sadong, Selakau and Lara groups, the Bidayuh were formerly known as Land Dayaks because of their upland inhabiting tendencies while the Iban were named Sea Dayaks because of their inclination towards the coastal regions.

Upriver dwellers refer to the Orang Ulu, a general term covering the Penan, Kayan, Kenyah, Kelabit and Lun Bawang while the Melanau make up the country’s balance of indigenous people.

The natives (27 ethnic tribes) comprise the group called Dayak. In the 1970s and 80s, there was a suggestion to drop the term. Until that time, the natives found no fault with it and were quite happy to be known as Dayak.

However, after the suggestion was made, hairline fractures began to appear in the unity of the natives who were previously quite content to come under the broad umbrella of the Dayak community.

The issue was brought up time and again with lukewarm response, for the most part. Nonetheless, there was, to a certain degree, a change in mindset when the term Dayak was conspicuously avoided and non-Muslim Bumiputeras was used in its place. The only time the term was widely used was during Gawai, the Harvest Festival.

The issue resurfaced recently following comments, in both local and national print media, by Rural and Development Deputy Minister Datuk Joseph Entulu on dropping of the term, Dayak, citing that it bore connotations that were negative, derogatory, uncouth and low class.

He was also quoted as having further said the term was coined by the colonial powers.

The suggestion received negative feedback from most Dayak leaders and politicians.

Entulu, however, denied making such a suggestion, saying he had been misquoted.

Secretary-general of the Dayak Cultural Foundation and president of Bung Bratak Heritage Association, Datuk Peter Minos, said it should be realised that the term, Dayak, is historically as old as the existence of the people so named.

Since time immemorial, the Bidayuh have referred to themselves as Dayak that literally means people. The notion that the word was coined by anyone, or for that matter, the colonial power, has little basis.

“We can’t run away from history. The word is as old as the history of the Bidayuh people,” said Minos, who has done extensive studies on the subject.

According to him, his researches have taken him to Indonesia, London and Amsterdam where he discovered the written records of the Spaniards who came to the Far East in the 12th century, and of the Dutch who followed suit in 17th century.

Both sets of documents referred to a certain indigenous tribe in the Far East known as Dayak. When the Brookes landed in Sarawak, they borrowed the term from the Spaniards and Dutch and used it to refer to the natives.

Minos’ discovery quashes any allegations or claims that the term was created ‘anyone or any power’, if not the Dayak people themselves.

Author and Bidayuh culture expert, Patrick Rigep Nuek, agrees with Minos on the origin of the term.

“The Dayak people are the original people of this land and have been in existence for centuries,” he said.

According to him, ‘Dayak’ means ‘people’ and does not refer to a particular race or creed.

”It is common to hear the Bidayuh referring to the term, Dayak Cina, which means Chinese people,” Rigep elaborated.

“As far as I can remember, we have been calling ourselves Dayak,” he said, dismissing the allegation that the term was coined by the colonial powers.

The British took the term from the Dayak to generalise all the ethnic tribes, and further categorised them into Sea and Land Dayak based on their respective inclinations, he explained.

“They called the Iban Sea Dayak because they were living along riverine and coastal regions and the Bidayuh Land Dayak because of their inclination towards hilly terrains,” Rigep added.

Here, Minos observed: “The Spaniards came in the 12th century and Dutch in the 17th century. By then, the term Dayak was already being used (based on written records). And that was long before any of the Brookes ever stepped on our land. It is a total absurdity to allege that the colonial powers coined the term.”

Dropping the term would be akin to ‘wiping the people off the face of the Earth’, he surmised.

“There are people on this Earth who are in extinction because of change to their name. And if that is to happen to the term Dayak, all the indigenous people of Sarawak will be extinction.”

Minos emphasised history must be respected because “it is our roots — our culture — for without history, we are a lost people.”

The indigenous people of Sarawak give the country its rich mosaic of traditions and cultures, which are a major lure of foreign tourists. They are the main actors in the play.

Land Development Minister Dato Sri Dr James Jemut Masing, also believes that the colonial powers could not have coined the term Dayak because it was in existence long before they set foot in Sarawak.

“The term used in this context is a generalised term that covers the three main non-Muslim Bumiputeras — Iban, Bidayuh and Orang Ulu.”

In Masing’s view, dropping the term will see the fragmentation of the indigenous people, and he is totally against the idea.

The Iban make up about 40 per cent of the indigenous community with the Bidayuh and Orang Ulu both at eight per cent.

Masing said disintegration would also bring about the non-recognition of the native people because there would then be too many small groups and that, according to him, is a far worse fate.

“It will disrupt the unity of the natives.”

Sharing similar sentiments, Rigep pointed out that Dayak, being a general term of reference for the natives, symbolised their solidarity.

“It is what that binds us together.”

Making an interesting point that is mostly ignored, he said in most official forms, the races indicated were Chinese, Indian and others.

“We are not one of the others,” he stressed.

“The term ‘others’ has adverse connotations — non-existence is one of them. Furthermore, dropping the term (Dayak) that gives the natives their identity will only exacerbate the situation,” he said.

In all fairness, the term (Dayak) should be inserted in all official forms in respect of the Dayak people who, after all, are the people of the land, he added.

The Brookes took the term Dayak to generalise all the Dayak and Rigep sees this as a blessing in disguise, saying “it is given to unite us.”

Minos believes the term gives the natives identity otherwise they will be lumped into ‘others’ as mentioned by Rigep.

He pointed out that the Chinese were also made up of many communities — Foochow, Hakka, Hokkien, Teochew, Cantonese — and they were generalised as Chinese.

“If you drop the term, Dayak, what then do you want to be,” Minos asked, emphasising that it took centuries for a name or a term to be established and accepted.

A Jew could be an American, European or Russian but he is still a Jew — likewise the Dayaks, he articulated.

A former state minister, Dato Sri Celestine Ujang, puts it simply: “The term Dayak has been widely accepted and established in this country. Whoever suggests that it should be dropped must be crazy.

“The term is just a term and any connotations — negative or positive — are all in the mind.”

This sentiment is shared by Masing, Rigep and Minos.

Rigep chipped in: “As a Bidayuh, if I were to say the term Dayak was uncivilised, uncouth and low class, then I would be suffering from inferiority complex. It shows I am not proud of who I am and what I represent.”

He totally agrees with Tasik Biru state assemblyman, Datuk Peter Nansian Ngusie, a Bidayuh, that being derogatory is what you make of it, not what you are.

“There is nothing derogatory or uncivilized about the term,” he said.

Minos said Malaysia is a democratic country where people were free to have their own perceptions even though he might disagree with them.

“We cannot control the minds and mouths of others but we can control our actions,” he added.

“It is up to the Dayaks themselves to prove the naysayers wrong and they have no reason to be ashamed of themselves for they are the rightful people of the land.”

Minos said he is proud to be a Dayak, even more so because he came from a humble beginning and despite the odds, managed to become what he is today.

Masing also said he is proud to be called a Dayak. Like Minos, he rose from the obscurity of the village to become a high-ranking politician.

“My parents are semi-illiterate and I was a poor kampong boy. Through determination and grit, I am what I am today.”

These two Dayak gentlemen became prominent figures in society through their own hard work.

And clearly, this goes to show that it’s not a term of reference or name that derogates a person but the person behind the name who either makes or breaks his own reputation through both word and deed.

Source Borneo Post

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Good Prayer

We are enveloped in peace when we know that nothing the enemy does can abort the plan of God for our lives. Relax your mind and humble your heart to focus on Christ. Allow God to be the only person on your mind while you read this prayer. If we can take the time to read long jokes , stories, etc., we should give the same respect to this prayer. Friends, who pray together, stay together. 

If you pray this prayer, change the number in the subject box before forwarding the message so people can SEE how many people have done so. 

Dear Lord, I thank you for this day. I thank You for me being able to see and to hear this morning. I'm blessed because You are a forgiving God and an understanding God. You have done so much for me and You keep on blessing me. Forgive me this day for everything I have done, said or thought that was not pleasing to you. I ask now for Your forgiveness. 

Please keep me safe from all danger and harm. Help me to start this day with a new attitude and plenty of gratitude. Let me make the best of each and every day to clear my mind so tha t I can hear from You. Please broaden my mind that I can accept all things. 

Let me not whine and whimper over things I have no control over. Let me continue to see sin through God's eyes and acknowledge it as evil. And when I sin, let me repent, and confess with my mouth my
wrongdoing, and receive the forgiveness of God. 

And when this world closes in on me, let me remember Jesus' example -- to slip away and find a quiet place to pray. It's the best response when I'm pushed beyond my limits. I know that when I can't pray, You listen to my heart. Continue to use me to do Your will. 

Continue to bless me that I may be a blessing to others. Keep me strong that I may help the weak.Keep me uplifted that I may have words of encouragement for others. I pray for those who are lost and can't find their way. I pray for those who are misjudged and misunderstood. I pray for those who don't know You intimately. I pray for those who will delete this without sharing it w ith others. I pray for those who don't believe. But I thank you that I believe. 

I believe that God changes people and God changes things. I pray for all my sisters and brothers. For each and every family member in their households. I pray for peace, love and joy in their homes that they are out of debt and all their needs are met. 

pray that every eye that reads this knows there is no problem, circumstance, or situation greater than God. Every battle is in Your hands for You to fight. I pray that these words be received into the hearts of every eye that sees them and every mouth that confesses them willingly.. 


This is my prayer.

In Jesus' Name, Amen.  

Monday, April 27, 2009

Orang miskin berkereta perlu dibantu?

KLANG 26 April – Jabatan Kebajikan Masyarakat (JKM) diminta mengkaji semula kaedah bantuan kepada kumpulan sasar kerana orang yang memiliki kereta mungkin berhak menerima bantuan.

Menteri Pembangunan Wanita, Keluarga dan Masyarakat, Senator Datuk Seri Shahrizat Abdul Jalil berkata, pendekatan yang digunakan sekarang seharusnya tidak menyukarkan kumpulan itu untuk mendapatkan bantuan.

Katanya, masalah yang membabitkan kumpulan berkenaan iaitu orang miskin, orang kurang upaya (OKU), warga emas dan pesakit mesti diberi perhatian sewajarnya.

Katanya, bantuan yang disalurkan perlu realistik kerana pada masa ini memiliki televisyen atau peti sejuk bukan lagi boleh dianggap barangan mewah.

Malah katanya, memiliki kereta atau motosikal juga merupakan keperluan dan perlu diambil kira oleh JKM.

“Jadi perkara ini perlu dikaji. JKM pada saya paling mustahak kerana ia mendampingi masyarakat, kalau kita bagus rakyat dapat faedah, kalau kita kurang bagus, kita bakal berhadapan risikonya,” katanya.

Beliau bercakap kepada pemberita selepas menutup Program Jom Mesra Sepakat di Balai Raya Taman Menegun di sini hari ini.

Program itu dianjurkan oleh Majlis Keselamatan Negara Negeri Selangor dan Jiran Wanita Tabika Perpaduan, Belia 4B taman perumahan berkenaan.

Shahrizat memberitahu, program itu aktiviti pertamanya turun padang mendekati rakyat sejak dilantik semula sebagai menteri di kementerian berkenaan pada awal bulan lalu.

Katanya, bagi memastikan sistem bantuan dan penyampaian JKM itu berjalan lancar, beliau akan berada di pejabat untuk memastikan urusan pentadbiran mengikut perancangan.

Shahrizat memberitahu, selebihnya iaitu 90 peratus waktu kerja akan diperuntukkan kepada program turun padang dalam usaha mendampingi rakyat.

Beliau juga, katanya, akan membuat lawatan mengejut ke sesuatu kawasan bagi melihat sendiri kemajuan yang dicapai.

‘‘Ini perlu dilakukan kerana 90 peratus kumpulan sasar berada di peringkat akar umbi,’’ ujarnya.

Secara keseluruhan, katanya, pegawai-pegawai JKM menjalankan tugas dengan baik.

‘‘Cuma banyak orang memerlukan bantuan, tetapi ini tidak harus dijadikan alasan kerana kalau orang perlu bantuan, kita kena bantu mereka,” katanya.

Sumber: Utusan Online

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Untimely Deaths

DID YOU KNOW THESE FACTS?
I SURE DIDN'T TILL NOW
Death is certain but the Bible speaks about untimely death!

Make a personal reflection about this......

Very interesting, read until the end......


It is written in the Bible (Galatians 6:7):


'Be not deceived; God is not mocked:

for whatsoever a man sow,

that shall he also reap.


Here are some men and women
who mocked God :

John Lennon
(Singer):


Some years before, during his interview with an American Magazine, he said:


' Chris tianity will end, it will disappear.

I do not have to argue about
that. I am certain.

Jesus was ok, but his subjects were too simple, today we are more famous than Him' (1966)..


Lennon, after saying that the Beatles were more famous than Jesus Chris t, was shot six times.


Tancredo Neves
(President of Brazil ):


During the Presidential campaign, he said if he got 500,000 votes from his party, not even God would remove him from Presidency.


Sure he got the votes, but he got sick a day before being made President, then he died..


Cazuza
(Bi-sexual Brazilian composer, singer and poet):


During A show in Canecio ( Rio de Janeiro ),

while smoking his cigarette, he puffed out some smoke into the air and said:'God, that's for you.'

He died at the age of 32 of LUNG CANCER in a horrible manner.


The man who built the Titanic


After the construction of Titanic, a reporter asked him how safe the Titanic would be.


With an ironic tone he said:


'Not even God can sink it'


The result:
I think you all know what happened to the Titanic


Marilyn Monroe
(Actress)


She was visited by Billy Graham during a presentation of a show.


He said the Spirit of God had sent him to preach to her.


After hearing what the Preacher had to say, she said:


'I don't need your Jesus'.


A week later, she was found dead in her apartment


Bon Scott
(Singer)


The ex-vocalist of the AC/DC. On one of his 1979 songs he sang:


'Don't stop me; I'm going down all the way, down the highway to hell'..


On the 19th of February 1980, Bon Scott was found dead, he had been choked by his own vomit.


Campinas
(IN 2005)


In Campinas , Brazil a group of friends, drunk, went to pick up a friend.....


The mother accompanied her to the car and was so worried about the drunkenness of her friends and she said to the daughter holding her hand, who was already seated in the car:


'My Daughter, Go With God And May He Protect You.'


She responded: 'Only If He (God) Travels In The Trunk, Cause Inside Here.....It's Already Full '


Hours later, news came by that they had been involved in a fatal accident, everyone had died,

the car could not be recognized what type of car it had been, but surprisingly, the trunk was intact.


The police said there was no way the trunk could have remained intact. To their surprise, inside the trunk was a crate of eggs, none was broken
.

Chris tine Hewitt
(Jamaican Journalist and entertainer)
said the Bible (Word of God) was the worst book ever written.


In June 2006 she was found burnt beyond recognition in her motor vehicle.


Many more important people have forgotten that there is no other name that was given so much authority as the name of Jesus.


Many have died, but only Jesus died and rose again, and he is still alive.


'Jesus'

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Senarai penuh barisan Kabinet baru

KUALA LUMPUR 9 April - Berikut ialah senarai penuh barisan Kabinet baru yang diumumkan oleh Perdana Menteri, Datuk Seri Najib Razak sebentar tadi.

PERDANA MENTERI : Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak

TIMBALAN PERDANA MENTERI: Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin

JABATAN PERDANA MENTERI:

Menteri:

1. Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu Koon (Hal Ehwal Perpaduan & Pengurusan Prestasi)

2. Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz (Hal Ehwal Perundangan dan Parlimen)

3. Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yakcop (Unit Perancang Ekonomi)

4. Mejar Jeneral (B) Datuk Jamil Khir Baharom (Hal Ehwal Agama Islam)

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Liew Vui Keong

2. Datuk Dr. Mashitah Ibrahim

3. Datuk S.K. Devamany

4. Ahmad Maslan

5. T. Murugiah

KEMENTERIAN KEWANGAN:

Menteri: Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak

Menteri II: Datuk Ahmad Husni Mohamad Hanadzlah

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Chor Chee Heung

2. Datuk Dr. Awang Adek Hussin

KEMENTERIAN PELAJARAN:

Menteri: Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Dr Wee Ka Siong

2. Dr. Mohd Puad Zarkashi

KEMENTERIAN PENGANGKUTAN:

Menteri: Datuk Ong Tee Keat

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Abdul Rahim Bakri

2. Datuk Robert Lau Hoi Chew

KEMENTERIAN PERUSAHAAN, PERLADANGAN DAN KOMODITI:

Menteri: Tan Sri Bernard Dompok

Timbalan Menteri: Datuk Hamzah Zainudin

KEMENTERIAN DALAM NEGERI:

Menteri: Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Tun Hussein

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Wira Abu Seman Yusop

2. Jelaing anak Mersat

KEMENTERIAN PENERANGAN, KOMUNIKASI, KESENIAN DAN KEBUDAYAAN:

Menteri: Datuk Seri Utama Dr. Rais Yatim

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Joseph Salang Gandum

2. Senator Heng Seai Kie

KEMENTERIAN TENAGA, TEKNOLOGI HIJAU DAN AIR:

Menteri: Datuk Peter Chin Fah Kui

Timbalan Menteri: Noriah Kasnon

KEMENTERIAN KEMAJUAN LUAR BANDAR DAN WILAYAH:

Menteri: Datuk Seri Shafie Apdal

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Hassan Malek

2. Datuk Joseph Entulu anak Belaun

KEMENTERIAN PENGAJIAN TINGGI:

Menteri: Datuk Seri Mohd Khaled Nordin

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Dr. Hou Kok Chung

2. Datuk Saifuddin Abdullah

KEMENTERIAN PERDAGANGAN ANTARABANGSA DAN INDUSTRI:

Menteri: Datuk Mustapa Mohamed

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Mukhriz Mahathir

2. Datuk Jacob Dungau Sagan

KEMENTERIAN SAINS, TEKNOLOGI DAN INNOVASI:

Menteri: Datuk Dr. Maximus Ongkili

Timbalan Menteri: Fadillah Yusof

KEMENTERIAN SUMBER ASLI DAN ALAM SEKITAR:

Menteri: Datuk Douglas Uggah Embas

Timbalan Menteri: Tan Sri Joseph Kurup

KEMENTERIAN PELANCONGAN:

Menteri: Datuk Ng Yen Yen

Timbalan Menteri: Datuk Seri Sulaiman Abdul Rahman Abdul Taib

KEMENTERIAN PERTANIAN DAN INDUSTRI ASAS TANI:

Menteri: Datuk Noh Omar

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Johari Baharum

2. Datuk Rohani Abdul Karim

KEMENTERIAN PERTAHANAN:

Menteri: Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi

Timbalan Menteri: Datuk Dr Abdul Latiff Ahmad

KEMENTERIAN KERJA RAYA:

Menteri: Datuk Shaziman Abu Mansor

Timbalan Menteri: Datuk Yong Khoon Seng

KEMENTERIAN KESIHATAN:

Menteri: Datuk Liow Tiong Lai

Timbalan Menteri: Datuk Rosnah Rashid Shirlin

KEMENTERIAN BELIA DAN SUKAN:

Menteri: Datuk Ahmad Shabery Cheek

Timbalan Menteri:

1. Datuk Razali Ibrahim

2. Wee Jeck Seng

KEMENTERIAN SUMBER MANUSIA:

Menteri: Datuk Dr S.Subramaniam

Timbalan: Datuk Maznah Mazlan

KEMENTEIAN PERDAGANGAN DALAM NEGERI DAN HAL EHWAL PENGGUNA:

Menteri: Datuk Ismail Sabri Yaakob

Timbalan Menteri: Datuk Tan Lian Hoe

KEMENTERIAN PERUMAHAN DAN KERAJAAN TEMPATAN:

Menteri: Datuk Kong Cho Ha

Timbalan Menteri: Datuk Lajim Ukin

KEMENTERIAN PEMBANGUNAN WANITA, KELUARGA DAN MASYARAKAT:

Menteri: Datuk Seri Sharizat Jalil

Timbalan Menteri: Datin Paduka Chew Mei Fun

KEMENTERIAN LUAR:

Menteri: Datuk Anifah Aman

Timbalan Menteri:

1. A. Kohilan Pillay

2. Datuk Lee Chee Leong

KEMENTERIAN WILAYAH PERSEKUTUAN:

Menteri: Datuk Raja Nong Chik Raja Zainal Abidin

Timbalan Menteri: Datuk M. Saravanan

Sumber: Utusan online

Monday, March 23, 2009

Barber finds ‘Jesus’ on church wall

A BARBER found Jesus — when he spotted what looks like Christ’s face on a CHURCH wall.

Crimper Alan Stocks, 40, clocked the amazing likeness while taking a break between customers outside his shop.

The gritty image even has a BEARD like Jesus and a crown of thorns made from moss growing on the stone.

The wall runs down one side of Greenock Westburn Church in the Inverclyde town. And last night delighted Alan said: “I noticed the face on the wall as soon as I saw it — it’s incredible. It definitely looks like Jesus.

“I was outside having a wee break and the face caught my eye — I’ve never noticed it before.

“I usually come to the same place most days for a break

“But it’s really strange that it’s on a church wall as well especially with it coming up for Easter. It’s as if it’s just appeared at this time of the year.”

Alan showed the face to his wife Sharon, 38, who was also struck by the likeness to Jesus, and took a photo to show pals.

Alan added: “Everyone I’ve shown the picture to has been the same — they’ve been stunned to see the face.

“And it’s certainly a mystery as to how it has appeared on the wall now.”

Greenock Westburn’s minister Rev Douglas Hamilton is yet to see the image. But he said last night: “If it brings a smile to people’s faces I’m happy with it.

“Though I’m not expecting flocks of pilgrims down to see it.”

The incredible likeness is the latest in a string of amazing sightings of Christ around the world.

Last February we told how shocked furniture maker Craig O’Connor spotted a figure bearing an uncanny resemblance to Jesus staring in a chopped tree trunk. He put the wood on internet auction site eBay, but nobody would pay more than £350 for it so he decided to try and make it into furniture.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Naked cycling's a ride laugh

CYCLING hurts your bum at the best of times - so imagine doing it NAKED.

But it didn't put off riders at this week's annual World Naked Bike Ride.

Thousands of enthusiasts around the world took part in the event this week.

And our snappers caught up with riders in Australia who painted their bits to expose "the vulnerability of cyclists, humanity and nature".

Well, from these shots we think they exposed more than enough.