Abdul Samad Ismail was born on a Southeast Asian island that was in 1925
(the year of his birth) a cosmopolitan outpost of the British Empire. Modern
Singapore had been founded in 1819 by Thomas Stamford Raffles, an official
of the English East India Company whose ideas about free trade and British
rule had resulted in a thriving commercial emporium on the island. Aside
from a handful of Britons, Singapore was populated by enterprising migrants
from China, who formed the majority, as well as by smaller numbers from
India and neighboring territories in Southeast Asia.
Samad Ismail's forebears arrived in the colony in the nineteenth century
from Java and established themselves as leaders in Singapore's small but
diverse Malayo-Muslim community, which included Malay migrant settlers from
Sumatra, Borneo, Bawean, and Madura as well as from Java and nearby Malaya.
His maternal grandfather, Haji Abdul Majid, was a well-to-do diamond
merchant. By family lore, he was the first Singapore Malay to possess a
proper horse-and-carriage and was a man of many children by many wives.
(Under Islamic law, he was permitted four at any one time.) Samad Ismail's
paternal grandfather, Haji Shairazi, led members of his central Java family
to Singapore and became a pilgrim broker, that is, someone who recruits
pilgrims for the Muslim haj to Mecca and who arranges their papers, passage,
accommodations, and religious instruction-a business that connected him
intimately to local Muslim families of wealth and high status. Although he
had only one wife and one natural son and daughter, Haji Shairazi adopted
several other children. As a result, says Samad, speaking of the legacy of
both his Javanese grandfathers (and in his characteristically blunt
English), "I've got relatives all over the damn place."
In the family, the traditions of Java and Islam were strong. Ismail bin
Shairazi, Samad's father, was steeped in Muslim learning. He studied for
five years in Mecca and was attracted to mystic schools of Islam as
practiced in Java, where he also studied. Samad describes him as a "staunch
Muslim" and a linguist who was fluent in Arabic, Malay, and Javanese and who
also knew Sanskrit. Samad's mother, Aida, was technically illiterate but he
describes her as a fount of stories from the epic story cycles of the
Ramayana and Mahabharata, the bases of Javanese literary and folk culture
and of the ideals of Javanese civilization. Although the ambient language of
Samad's boyhood Singaporean neighborhood of Kampung Melayu was Malay, at
home the family spoke Javanese.
After years of travel and religious study in Arabia and Java, Samad's
father, Haji Ismail, settled into a life of teaching at a local Malay school
in Singapore. Eventually he became headmaster. He was a writer, too,
contributing articles in Malay to local newspapers. And he was esteemed for
his knowledge of Arabic and Islam. Haji Ismail and his wife Aida occupied
positions of prominence in the local community. Colonialism was at its
height and, among Muslims in Singapore and the world at large, much was
astir. Leading figures of the Singaporean Muslim community gathered
regularly at Haji Ismail's house to discuss and argue about the current fate
and future of the Malays, as young Samad listened in. Haji Ismail himself
was a pioneer in the proto-nationalist Kesatuan Melayu (Malay Union), an
organization that aspired to foster the interests of Malays within the
British-held territories.
Samad was the eighth of Haji Ismail and Aida's sixteen children. But such
were the inadequate health conditions in the colony that all of Samad's
older brothers died as children. (Three older sisters survived.) "I was the
oldest surviving son," he says. Because of this, Haji Ismail placed much
hope in his advancement. Like other boys in Kampung Melayu, Samad began his
education in the local Malay-language school run by his father, Rochore
School, which offered only five years of schooling. When Samad was in
standard four, he began attending an "afternoon school" run by Singapore's
prestigious Victoria School, to learn English. The next year, he entered the
English-medium Victoria School directly. At the time, Victoria School
offered special classes for boys shifting from Malay- to English-language
education. Samad excelled as a student and moved rapidly through the upper
standards, skipping two grades and achieving his Senior Cambridge
Certificate in 1941. His studies at Victoria were supported by a scholarship
from Kesatuan Melayu, whose leaders had spotted Samad as a youth with
potential. "At that time," Samad wrote many years later, "among my circle of
[boyhood] friends, only three people (including me) remained in school
through the Senior Cambridge and passed."
As Samad moved upward through his Malay- and English-language schooling, he
discovered the joys of reading. By walking to school, he saved the money his
parents gave him for tram fare and used it to buy magazines such as
Detective Weekly and Thriller and secondhand books of all kinds. To read the
English newspapers, he would wait for the family neighbor, Pak Hamid, to
fall into his afternoon siesta in his long chair and then quickly borrow the
Malaya Tribune from the table in his front room. For the Malay-language
news, he (and his father) relied on his older sister's husband, a subscriber
to Utusan Melayu (Malay Messenger), a prominent prewar newspaper. At
Victoria School, he haunted the library and savored the free books and
magazines there. At home, he read Malay short stories and news items from
around the world to his mother, who could not read them herself.
During his early teen years, Samad also became an avid musician and played
the guitar and ukulele in a neighborhood keroncong group-a hobby his family
nipped in the bud when he entered the senior grades. As Samad approached
graduation, his father and friends pondered his future. Samad himself
aspired to become a government or private office clerk, a position
potentially open to him because of his English-language education. Such jobs
paid the princely wage of thirty Singapore ringgits a month. But Samad's
father had other hopes for him.
One option was to send him to Sultan Idris Training College in the
neighboring British Malay States, where he could be trained as a teacher
and, it was hoped, return to Singapore as the colony's first Singapore-born
assistant inspector of Malay schools. Such positions, at the time, were
dominated by Malays from the British enclave in nearby Malacca, another of
Britain's three Straits Settlements, which comprised Singapore, Malacca, and
Penang. Another option, however, was to apprentice him to Abdul Rahim Kajai,
editor of Utusan Melayu, with the hope that he might become the first
Singapore-born Malay journalist and newspaper editor. Kajai himself and
other prominent journalists of the time were all from the other Straits
Settlements or the Malay Peninsula. After exploring this option with Kajai,
Samad was accepted as a trainee without pay at the newspaper. He began as
soon as he completed his Senior Cambridge in 1941; thus, at the age of
sixteen, he became a cub reporter.
Utusan Melayu was a new newspaper and an upstart. It had been founded in
1939 by Singaporean leaders of Kesatuan Melayu, including Samad's father, as
a local organ for the expression of Malay aspirations and culture and in
competition with the older Malay-language Warta Malaya (owned by Sayyid
Hussein Alsagoff and viewed by the local Malays as an "Arab" paper). Kajai
had worked at Warta Malaya before agreeing to become editor of the new
paper. He was an intensely hardworking editor who, as Samad remembers him,
worked from dawn till dusk in Utusan Melayu's cramped office wearing only a
singlet-it was so hot. Kajai was a pioneering Malay-language journalist and
also a literary man who could recite Arabic and English poetry.
Under Kajai's direction, Samad learned the rudiments of journalism. Each
day, he made the rounds of the courtrooms, the police stations, and the
hospitals and returned to the office to write up his stories, which were
invariably rejected, he says. Utusan Melayu was a Malay-language newspaper
but "newspaper Malay," as Kajai was then developing it, was a livelier and
brisker form of the language than the formal literary one Samad had learned
in school. "I had to shed off my schoolboyish sort of Malay," he says, and
"learn a new kind of Malay." He also had to learn a new, more colloquial
form of English in order to interview British officers and other Singaporean
officials, among whom English was the lingua franca. Kajai also put Samad to
work translating wire-service news dispatches from English into Malay,
forcing him to sharpen his skills in both languages. After three months,
Kajai began paying Samad ten ringgits a month, eight of which he invested in
night school to improve his typing and to learn shorthand, a necessity for
court reporters. A fast learner and indefatigable, young Samad was soon
indispensable. His stories improved and they began to appear in print.
Meanwhile, the political balance of power in Asia was changing rapidly. By
July 1941, the Japanese Imperial Army had entered French Indochina (with the
acquiescence of French colonial officials) and from there began its conquest
of the rest of Southeast Asia. Britain's colonies fell quickly, as Japan's
forces advanced through the region after 7 December 1941. Singapore was
thought to have been impregnable, but Britain surrendered it to Japan on 15
February 1942. Suddenly, Singapore had new masters.
As a cub reporter at Utusan Melayu, Samad still lived at home with his
family in Kampung Melayu. The neighborhood lay athwart the route of Japan's
advance into the city and fighting raged in the vicinity for three days.
Samad's family huddled in trenches during the fighting; their house was
damaged. Soon afterwards, a trusted messenger arrived from Utusan Melayu
with an official letter from the Japanese Imperial Army summoning Samad to
work. He was given a white armband with an inscription in Japanese, so that
he could walk safely to the office. As he did so, he saw the dead bodies of
British and Indian soldiers and common people strewn about the streets and
thousands of British soldiers waiting aimlessly to be processed as prisoners
of war. He witnessed Chinese men, women, and children bound with barbed
wire, being led away by Japanese soldiers. He saw, mounted on Kallang
Bridge, the severed heads of Malay youths said to have killed a Japanese
soldier. At the newspaper office, he helped locate the men who could operate
the printing presses and assisted in publishing the first public
announcements of the Japanese Occupation in Malay: "Be calm. Do not loot or
steal. Give your full cooperation to the Empire of Japan."
Samad was prepared to cooperate. He had not suffered personally under the
British, he says. He had not even experienced racial discrimination. His
father, as a school headmaster, was an employee of the colonial government
and, moreover, Kesatuan Melayu, the organization with which he was
affiliated, was not overtly anti-British. Nevertheless, Samad and his family
circle were acutely aware that the British were foreign occupiers-foreign
masters. When the British were driven out in 1942, he remembers thinking,
"OK, they're gone and we have got new masters. We'll try our best to
survive."
Singapore's prewar newspapers were now reorganized to meet Japanese needs.
In 1943, Utusan Melayu and Warta Melayu were amalgamated into Berita Malai
(Malay News) and moved to share offices with the island's new
English-language newspaper, Syonam Shimbun, which replaced the prewar
Straits Times. For Samad and the staff of Berita Malai, this meant using
modern Linotype machines for the first time and converting from the Arabic
to the Roman alphabet. This dramatic shift brought Singapore's
Malay-language press in line with the larger press of the Dutch East Indies,
which had long since adopted Roman letters. The Indies, soon to be
Indonesia, was also part of Japan's Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere,
and Singapore was ruled as part of a unit that included both Malaya and
Sumatra. This fact drew many Indonesians to the island during the war and
quite a few of them found work at Berita Malai-where young Samad found them
very good company.
The two dominating figures at Berita Malai during the early war years were
Kajai and his assistant, Haji Muhammad Ishak. But Kajai's health soon failed
and he died in 1943. Ishak abandoned the paper to participate in a
Japanese-sponsored development scheme. In their absence, Samad rose to
become de facto managing editor, supervising the entire process of putting
the daily paper together, from keeping the presses working to writing
editorials. The entire operation was under strict Japanese censorship,
however, and many conventional newspaper "beats," such as the courts and
crime, were off limits. Official news came directly from the Japanese. His
hands tied, Samad used the opportunity to master the mechanics of publishing
and to promote and publish the one kind of writing that was curiously safe,
namely, literature. He filled the pages of Berita Malai with Malay poems and
stories and also wrote his own first short stories depicting Singaporean
life under the Japanese-positively, of course, but with subtle satirical
undertones. In one of them, "Ubi Kayu" (Tapioca), as David Banks has written
in From Class to Culture: Social Conscience in Malay Novels since
Independence, Samad "carries the spirit of loyalty to the war effort…to a
point that readers must have identified as excessive." At the same time,
Samad worked to rectify and standardize the Indonesian and Malayan romanized
spelling systems and vocabularies, which reflected orthographies and loan
words from two different imperial powers. For example, the Malay word
meaning secretary, jurutulis-as written in British-colonized Singapore and
Malaya-was rendered djoeroetoelis in the nearby Dutch East Indies.
As a newspaperman and someone associated daily with influential Malay
organizations through his father and mentors, Samad was naturally attuned to
the shifting political sentiments of the times, including those of the
neighboring Indies. There, anticolonial nationalist aspirations and
organizations were far in advance of anything in Singapore and Malaya. One
Malay journalist who harkened to these developments was Ibrahim Yaacob (Ibrahim
bin Haji Yaacob), who formed Kesatuan Melayu Muda (Young Malay Union) in
1938. Ibrahim's Young Turk group was overtly nationalist. Advocating
independence, it was the first politically radical organization among
Peninsular or Singapore Malays. This led the British to arrest Ibrahim for
subversion shortly before the fall of Singapore to Japan. "During the
Japanese Occupation," says Samad, "I came into contact with Ibrahim Yaacob.
He set up a movement to prepare the Malays for independence." By Malays,
Ibrahim meant virtually all ethnic Malays, to include a swath of territory
stretching from southern Thailand through Malaya and Singapore and embracing
all the Indies and the Philippines as well as parts of Cambodia and Vietnam.
It was a breathtaking political vision, made possible in part by Japan's
shake-up of the former colonial landscape. The idea thrilled Samad and he
joined Ibrahim's new organization, Kesatuan Rakyat Indonesia Semenanjung, or
KERIS (Union of the People of Peninsular Indonesia), which was dedicated to
achieving this goal. In this connection, he began to make contact among
Indonesian nationalist leaders who were active in Singapore during the war
and also with the anti-Japanese Chinese underground.
Through contacts like these and from others who secretly listened to British
and allied radio broadcasts during the war, Samad was aware that the
Japanese news releases he was publishing in Berita Malai were often false.
The Japanese empire was weaker than it seemed, and growing weaker. Even so,
the war's end caught KERIS off guard. A congress convened to proclaim
Malaya's independence in August 1945, at which Samad represented Singapore,
aborted when Japan suddenly surrendered. Meanwhile, Indonesian nationalists
seized the moment and on 17 August 1945 declared Indonesia independent.
Among the many profound consequences of this was the end, for the time being
at least, of Ibrahim's dream of a Southeast Asia-wide pan-Malay nation.
The Occupation years were also Samad's coming-of-age years. Amid an intense
life of work and, increasingly, of political activity as well, Samad enjoyed
the life of a young man on the loose. According to Melan Abdullah, a older
friend and Samad's family-anointed chaperon, "he had a wild streak that was
often hopelessly unmanageable." For a time, he took up residence in a shop
house with some dance hostesses who worked at Singapore's popular and
notorious New World amusement park-he became their self-appointed
"bodyguard"-and sometimes fell into scrapes with the girls' Japanese officer
clients. He loved to gamble and to gad about town and had friends high and
low, including, says Melan Abdullah, "a string of girlfriends in his
'harem.'" Desperate to settle him down, Samad's family and friends
maneuvered him into a tentative courtship-by-letter with Hamidah Hassan (Hamidah
binte Hassan Lubis), a respectable young school teacher living in Penang.
Hamidah's parents were both migrants from Dutch Sumatra and Hamidah's older
sister was engaged to one of Samad's close friends. Samad was so offhand
about his letters to Hamidah that he let his friends write them for him; he
merely signed them. Hamidah always replied, also with ghostwritten letters.
On an assignment for Ibrahim Yaacob, Samad finally met Hamidah personally
and the two hit it off. She and her sister and her parents moved to
Singapore where Hamidah soon worked at Berita Malai. Although Samad was an
unorthodox suitor, the family circle urged the young couple forward and they
were married in the spring of 1945. They were a good match, as the family
had foreseen. Eventually, Samad and Hamidah had ten children together.
In Singapore, Japan's abrupt collapse led to a period of chaos involving
bloody ethnic reprisals (as anti-Japanese Chinese struck out against
collaborating Malays, for example) as well as common banditry-all this as
Britain slowly reestablished its colonial authority. Amid the mayhem, KERIS
and Samad worked with the Chinese underground of the communist-led Malayan
Peoples' Anti-Japanese Army (MPAJA) to urge Malays and Chinese not to fight
each other. These connections, as well as Samad's role during the Occupation
with Berita Malai, attracted British attention. As Hamidah described it,
"British army officers with Gurkha escorts armed with sten guns came almost
daily to the house to 'interview' him or to take him away to their
headquarters." He spent three months in a military prison and was finally
tried and discharged, in part, evidently, because his defense counsel argued
that twenty-year-old Samad had been too young to have written the seditious
wartime articles of his own volition.
Yusof Ishak now revived Utusan Melayu and he recruited Samad to return as
his Number Two. Ishak was a veteran journalist and a strong figure who later
became president of Singapore. "But he was illiterate in Malay," says Samad.
"So I had to run the paper on his behalf. There was no official designation.
But everyone knew I was his assistant." With Samad at the editorial helm,
Utusan Melayu became a force in the Malay struggle for independence in
Malaya and Singapore (still British territories) and in the Indies, where
Sukarno and other leaders of the newly proclaimed Republic of Indonesia were
locked in a revolutionary struggle with the Dutch. The newspaper was openly
anticolonial-"not so much anti-British or anti-Dutch," says Samad-and it
weighed in in favor of local parties and social organizations dedicated to
reform and independence, including Singapore's lively radical labor unions.
It opposed decolonization plans offered by the British such as the Malayan
Union Plan (announced in 1946), which would diminish the status and
influence of Malays in any forthcoming postcolonial state. Samad recruited a
far-flung network of volunteer reporters and informants throughout the Malay
Peninsula and, through them, kept his finger on the pulse of political and
social developments. Meanwhile, at the Utusan Melayu editorial offices,
Samad entertained a string of visitors from the parties and social
organizations, including many of the island's key political and intellectual
actors-making the newspaper a kind of nerve center of the evolving political
scene.
In the meantime, Samad had become a political actor himself. "I joined the
left wing," he says. He became a founding member of the Malayan Nationalist
Party, which, reprising the wartime idea of a Greater Indonesia, still
envisioned independent Malaya as part of Indonesia. With other members of
the left wing, he drafted the People's Constitution for Malaya and Singapore
as an alternative to the one offered by Britain and supported by the more
conservative Malays affiliated with the United Malays National Organization
(UMNO). The People's Constitution was in accord with UMNO on the issue of
religion and language: Islam should be the national religion and Malay the
national language. But it called for immediate self-government with a fully
elected legislature within the British Commonwealth-moving much faster to
independence than the conservative plan. And, as Samad explains, it promoted
a radical idea for citizenship: "that all those who made Malaya their
permanent home and the object of their undivided loyalty shall have the
right to become citizens, and these citizens [meaning not only Malays but
also people of Indian and Chinese descent] should be called Melayu (Malay),
not Malayan." (The word Malayan generally describes a place, the Malay
Peninsula, whereas Melayu/Malay connotes the Malay people and their
culture.)
Some of Samad's own anticolonial radicalism grew from his early association
with Ibrahim Yaacob and Kesatuan Melayu Muda and with the many Indonesians
he met during the Occupation years. He identified closely with the
revolution in Indonesia (where Ibrahim Yaacob was now a member of the
revolutionary government) and, between 1946 and 1949, worked actively for
the cause. In Singapore, Samad arranged for commodities shipped past Dutch
blockades by Indonesian privateers (for example, rubber, charcoal, fish) to
be bartered for arms and other needed items, such as socks and boots and
typewriters. He secured funds and safe passage for representatives of the
Indonesian revolutionary government to the United States, where the United
Nations was meeting, and other destinations on the outside. He promoted the
cause of Indonesian independence to political parties in Malaya and
Singapore, including UMNO and its founder Dato' Onn bin Jaafar, "trying to
persuade him to declare support for the Indonesian revolution in his
speeches." Samad also became a part-time correspondent for Indonesia's
Antara news agency, with its "offices" at Utusan Melayu where, in the spirit
of solidarity, Samad and his cohorts called each other "Bung"-as in Bung
Samad and Bung Kamal-mimicking the fashion in revolutionary Indonesia.
Through such activities Samad came to know several Indonesian leaders,
including Adam Malik, Sutan Sjahrir, Haji Agus Salim, and A. K. Ghani.
Samad's contribution to the cause was significant enough for Indonesia's
President Sukarno to mention him publicly during a speech in Singapore four
years later. But, typically, it seems, Samad's wife Hamidah knew nothing
about these activities and was taken aback, many years later, when the
Indonesian ambassador to Malaysia recalled how he and Samad had been
gunrunners "smuggling arms from Singapore to Indonesia" during the
revolution. Samad, wrote Hamidah in 1987, "preferred to keep me in blissful
ignorance about his Indonesian friends."
By the late 1940s, Indonesian independence had been achieved. On Samad's
side of the Straits, however, left-wing projects for immediate autonomy had
been thwarted with the inauguration in 1948 of the Federation of Malaya
plan, a more evolutionary and conservative approach to decolonization
favoring elite Malays and their Chinese and Indian allies. Singapore was on
a separate decolonization track. Residual elements of the communist-led (and
largely Chinese) Malayan Peoples' Anti-Japanese Army now reformulated
themselves as the Malayan Races Liberation Army and launched a guerilla war
on the peninsula against the vestigial colonial state and its local allies.
This was the so-called Malayan Emergency, which, rightly or wrongly, was
construed by Britain and its Cold War allies as part of a worldwide
communist conspiracy. Similar movements now challenged France's colonial
claims in Vietnam and the newly independent United States-supported
government of the Philippines. As a prominent anticolonialist and overtly
left-wing activist, as well as someone who had worked openly and legally
with communists in Singapore, Samad was now vulnerable. More than once in
the years to come, he would be tarred by the Cold War brush.
As the political winds shifted in the late 1940s, Samad turned more of his
creative energy to literature and, more particularly, to the potential of
literature to raise and shape national consciousness. As Malaysian
journalist Ahmad Sebi has written, "He was the one who saw clearly that
literature and the arts could be used as a weapon in the struggle against
colonialism." At Utusan Melayu and its affiliate publications, he drew
around him some of the best Malay writers of the times, including Keris Mas
(Kamaluddin Muhammad) and Usman Awang, who formed the core of a new group
called Angkatan Sastrawan 50, or ASAS 50 (meaning the Literary Generation of
1950; the acronym ASAS means "basis"). The ASAS 50 writers consciously
fostered Malay nationalism and, at the same time, promoted writing in Malay
as an act of national expression. Moreover, says Samad, "they wrote about
poor people, laborers, and peasants and the struggle against poverty, the
inequities of landlordism. They wrote about people." The ASAS 50 writers
worked to promote Malay as a national language and to advance formal
education in Malay as an important component of the fast-evolving and
soon-to-be independent national society. Samad was not a member of ASAS 50,
formally speaking, but he was the group's acknowledged mentor (and sometimes
its harsh critic). At Utusan Melayu, he fostered the talents and careers of
its leading lights, filling the newspaper's pages with their stories, poems,
and essays and contributing several of his own under various pen names.
By 1950, Samad, an avowed left-wing nationalist, was involved along several
fronts in the independence movement. Both as a journalist and as a political
actor behind the scenes, he maintained a vast array of contacts and these
included members of the Communist Party of Malaya. Following the notorious
Maria Hertogh case-in which a Eurasian girl who had been adopted and raised
by a Muslim family was "restored" by the Singaporean authorities to a proper
Christian home and in which Utusan Melayu led in attacking the
government-Samad was jailed as a subversive. As he recalls, "There were
riots. After the riots, there was a mass arrest and then, after some time, I
was arrested." According to the American writer James Michener, who
interviewed Samad the day before his arrest, the following morning
Singaporean newspapers carried a photograph of him identified as "one of the
leaders of the communist party in Malaya."
Samad Ismail was not a pliant prisoner. He immediately went on a hunger
strike to be removed from Singapore's infamous Changi Prison-resulting in
his transfer to another detention center on Saint John's Island-and to be
provided better food and freer access to radio and the news. Most of the
prisoners at Saint John's, numbering in the thousands altogether, were
Chinese workers and students. Samad learned Chinese and led them in
agitating for improved camp conditions. He was, he says, "in continuous
confrontation with the camp authorities for three and a half years." Samad
also learned some Hindustani to communicate with camp wardens, many of whom
were Sikhs and friendly to Samad because of his wartime sympathies for
Subhas Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army, which had attempted to
launch an Indian independence movement from Singapore. On Saint John's,
Samad lived in a bungalow and enjoyed some freedoms such as doing his own
marketing in the camp's bazaar, under guard of course. He spent much of his
time writing and managed to smuggle his stories and essays out, to be
published under various pen names in Utusan Melayu and other publications.
Meanwhile, Samad's detention (along with that of other Singaporean political
activists such as Samad's onetime schoolmate, Devan Nair), became something
of a cause célèbre. Indonesia offered Samad political asylum. Among those
who worked for his release was Lee Kuan Yew, who "became our legal counsel,"
says Samad. More importantly, the new leader of UMNO, Tunku Abdul Rahman,
began making fiery speeches demanding the release of Samad and other
political detainees. By 1953, the issue had reached the House of Commons and
this, at last, says Samad, "rattled the British colonial government." Samad
was released on condition that he remain at home between 6:00 P.M. and 6:00
A.M. every day. He ignored the conditions and chased away the police who
came to monitor him. This worked. To save face, Samad says, the British
authorities simply "pretended the conditions didn't exist in the first
place."
Back at the helm of Utusan Melayu, Samad again threw himself into developing
the newspaper as a voice for independence. "The anticolonial wave had begun
again," he says. "I sensed this, so we became more and more direct in our
criticism of British rule and the paper prospered." Once again the Utusan
Melayu's offices became a hub for politicians, writers, and activists, as
Samad carried on his open-ended seminars with one and all. Samad now
extended his newspaper's reach throughout the peninsula. "We were able to
set up a network of reporters…all over the damn shop," he says. "It was sort
of an intelligence network…my eyes and ears on the ground. I was better
informed than the government." Many of Samad's eyes and ears were actually
local police, postal workers, clerks, and teachers who wrote their stories
for little or nothing-out of a sense of nationalism and the satisfaction and
status of being a writer for Utusan Melayu. Samad corresponded directly with
this far-flung team, reading their work carefully and sending it back with
corrections. On holidays, he conducted workshops for his aspiring Malay
reporters, teaching them "the business of journalism…how to write, the why,
the how, the what." He gave frank criticism and was often sharp to the point
of ridicule. But he took his aspiring writers seriously (telling one, who
covered sports, "Don't waste your time!").
Samad opened Utusan Melayu to its readers by launching a Readers' Forum
(Mimbar), a page full of letters. And he continued to foster the ASAS 50
writers and their agenda. A passionate issue was language. Many
Western-trained intellectuals and the British themselves argued that English
had supplanted other languages as the voice of modern civilization and
progress. Malays and other Asians should therefore adopt it as their own
language for education and for the high endeavors of science, technology,
and even literature-and let their mother tongues recede to second-tier
status for use in the neighborhood and home. Samad vehemently disagreed.
Malay, he said, was the language of a great culture and "the lingua franca
for seventy million people…in particular, it is the language of the
homelands and strongholds of the Malay race." True, he said, "in scope of
expression and breadth of consciousness, particularly the scientific
consciousness of the modern world, Malay is backward when compared with
languages like English and Chinese." But this merely reflected the current
social and economic backwardness of the Malay people. As "the peoples of
Malaya…inevitably progress toward modern forms of social, political, and
economic organization…we can be certain that the Malay language will gain in
richness, vitality and beauty, together with the emancipation and growth of
Malay society." Writers, he said, have a special responsibility for bringing
all this about.
The offices of Utusan Melayu in the 1950s were cramped and cluttered and the
atmosphere was aggressively casual. Samad himself was a notoriously sloppy
dresser and, according to Keris Mas, a colleague at Utusan Melayu and an
ASAS 50 leader, "he was just as careless with the way he managed his time.
The hours for lunch or dinner somehow were mixed with the hours for work."
Samad loved to harass his staff with "his rich repertoire of dirty words,"
but all the while, writes Keris Mas, his "fingers would be ferociously
knocking at his typewriter, putting into shape an editorial or a feature on
the international scene. He would seldom sit properly in his chair. His
favorite posture was to simply cross his legs on his chair and work, sipping
his coffee and chain smoking his cigarettes. The furious banging of his
typewriter sounded like the staccato bursts of a machine gun. The fingers
moved quickly and chaotically, the typing done without any apparent system
or order."
Among those who frequently stopped by the Utusan Melayu offices was Lee Kuan
Yew. Lee was Samad's lawyer as well as legal counsel to the newspaper and to
several of Singapore's labor unions. Lee first met Samad on Saint John's
Island and, after Samad's release, he brought Samad into his efforts to form
a strong, multiracial, anticolonial political party in Singapore. Samad had
close ties to all three Singaporean communities: the Malays, Indians, and
Chinese (including radical workers and students from his prison days). He
also had unparalleled anticolonial credentials. "Almost every week," says
Samad, "I was in Lee's house, discussing. He needed Malay support and
Chinese student and Chinese worker's support and it was through me that he
got that. So we decided to form the People's Action Party." Samad thus
became one of the original conveners of the left-wing PAP, along with Goh
Keng Swee, Devan Nair, S. Rajaratnam, Lim Chin Siong, and others. Among
other things, Samad helped draft the constitution and the party's manifesto
and recruited influential Malays to join.
In time, however, as Lee Kuan Yew consolidated his power through the party
amid the turbulent mid-1950s, Samad drifted away. "Harry [Lee] was using me
as a sort of telephone operator to get in touch with the Chinese Left," he
says. "But I wasn't in control of the Chinese Left; I could only pass
messages." This led to misunderstandings. Moreover, Lee "started to change.
He was overawed by British power" and feared "that at any time the British
might clamp down." In 1957, Samad says, "I quietly left the PAP. There was
no quarrel. I saw him [Lee] before I went to Indonesia. We talked nicely and
I just left him like that. I never saw him again."
All of this occurred against the backdrop of intense political debates
surrounding decolonization in Malaya and Singapore. What kind of state,
exactly, will replace the colonial state? Whose interests will it reflect?
And who will lead it? In these debates, Samad's voice remained a radical
one. This led him to oppose, for example, the extension of Britain's
Emergency Regulations in the soon-to-be self-governing territories as well
as defense arrangements proposed by Britain, such as the Anglo-Malayan
Defense Treaty, which would extend certain of its colonial powers well
beyond independence.
In these opinions and others, he was often at odds with Tunku Abdul Rahman,
UMNO's leader and, after 31 August 1957, prime minister of the newly
independent Federation of Malaya. When Yusof Ishak, Utusan Melayu's managing
editor and editor-in-chief, moved the newspaper to the federation's new
capital in Kuala Lumpur earlier that year, everyone assumed that Samad would
be running the paper as usual. Instead, Ishak assigned Samad to be Utusan's
correspondent in Indonesia and moved the newspaper to Kuala Lumpur without
him. As Utusan Melayu's then news editor, Said Zahari, wrote later, Samad
Ismail "was surely missed but, strangely, no one ever asked or talked about
him, even in private." Samad himself refused to discuss it at the time. He
now says that Tunku himself "passed the word that he didn't like the idea of
my going to Kuala Lumpur and editing the paper"-this, evidently, because of
Samad's extensive influence among UMNO party leaders from the village up to
Tunku's ruling circle, the result of his years of networking. According to
Samad, Ishak told him "I'm sorry, you can't go to Kuala Lumpur. If you go to
Kuala Lumpur, Tunku will close down my paper." So, says Samad, "I went off
quietly to Jakarta."
In Indonesia, Samad was warmly received by his old Indonesian comrades. Adam
Malik arranged an office for him at Antara, the government news agency, and
also a place to live. He introduced him to leading political figures. This
"exile" gave Samad an opportunity to see independent Indonesia firsthand. He
traveled extensively. And he was very disturbed. "I didn't expect Indonesia
to be so badly off," he says. "The poverty! I was very disillusioned." To
think, he says, "this is what I fought for."
Samad's Indonesian exile lasted eight months. He then returned to Singapore
and, after twelve years with Utusan Melayu, accepted an offer at the Straits
Times, its rival, and, moreover, a newspaper intimately identified with
British colonial rule. The Times was Singapore's establishment newspaper and
its newspaper of record. "Unless the Straits Times confirmed an article or
news," says Samad, "people wouldn't believe it." It avoided causes-just as
Utusan Melayu embraced them-and it was published in English. In 1957,
however, the Straits Times Group launched a new Malay-language version of
their flagship newspaper called Berita Harian (Daily News). In 1958, Samad
became its de facto editor and moved to the newspaper's editorial office in
Kuala Lumpur. This time, evidently, Tunku Abdul Rahman did not object.
Unlike Utusan Melayu, the upshot Berita Harian was not influential.
Moreover, says Samad, "he knew it was under the Straits Times and the
Straits Times could manage me."
When Samad began to work at Berita Harian, it was little more than an
assembly of Straits Times articles and editorials translated into Malay. His
assignment was to raise the standard of the translations, standardize the
spelling, and improve the content. Samad's staff counted only a handful of
translators and junior editors. He gave them crash courses on copyediting
and layouting and set about recruiting a team of reporters. As he had done
before at Utusan Melayu, he solicited news items and articles from aspiring
writers around the country, identifying those with potential and coaching
them to improve their work. "I [would] read a story,…cut it down and send it
[back] to them [saying], 'Please follow up,' telling them, 'I want this and
this.'" He soon had a network of eager stringers placed throughout Malaya's
villages, towns, and cities who supplied him with a steady stream of fresh
material for the new daily. In this way, he not only improved the content of
Berita Harian but also began to shape it as a distinctively Malay newspaper.
Samad's responsibilities were not limited to Berita Harian, however. His
assignment with the Straits Times Group also called for him to write
editorials and feature articles in English for the flagship paper. To this
he brought a unique perspective born of his own nationalist sensibilities
and his knowledge of the Malay experience from the grassroots. "What I tried
to do was to interpret Malay aspirations…to English-speaking readers," he
says. "Urban people didn't understand what was happening in the rural areas.
My job was to close this gap." In a series of articles in the early 1960s,
for example, Samad examined in depth the lives and economic circumstances of
Malaya's east coast states, where a conservative Muslim party had made
inroads against the ruling UMNO, alarming the Malay establishment. "The core
problem of Kelantan," he concluded, "is not that it is Islamic…but land
hunger-poverty, in other words, expressed in religious symbols. This is what
most writers at the time…failed to understand." The underlying issues were
not religious but "poverty, backwardness, illiteracy-all these things."
Samad's insightful investigations into Malay life occurred during a period
when the character and membership of the emerging Malayan nation remained
hotly contested. In 1963, the already independent Federation of Malaya
merged with the locally self-governing but not yet independent Singapore and
two vestigial British colonies on nearby Borneo (Sarawak and Sabah) to form
Malaysia. This new and largely unanticipated entity altered the evolving
political equation profoundly. The Borneo territories added new populations
of indigenous non-Malay hill peoples, along with smaller numbers of Malays
and Chinese. Singapore added its large numbers of Chinese subjects and its
dynamic and ambitious leader, Lee Kuan Yew-who withdrew his ministate from
the Malaysian Federation in 1965, but not before stirring things up
considerably. Moreover, President Sukarno of neighboring Indonesia assailed
the new Malaysian state as a neocolonial deception designed to extend
British imperial power in the region indefinitely. Launching the so-called
Confrontation, he vowed to destroy it.
Meanwhile, at Berita Harian and the Straits Times, Samad was fully engaged,
working at his desk hours on end and carrying home piles of articles, short
stories, and poems to read and correct at night. As his editor-in-chief Lee
Siew Yee remembered some years later, "That paper was A. Samad Ismail's
life." In Singapore, Samad had joined and indeed often led dozens of
organizations: the Singapore Malay Journalists, Malay Chamber of Commerce,
Malay Education Council, Red Crescent, National Union of Journalists, and so
on. He had also been an active player in island politics and a founding
member of its dominant political party. But in Kuala Lumpur, he says, "I was
just a journalist." Even so, Samad was close to power, particularly to Tun
Abdul Razak, the Tunku's deputy premier for many years and then prime
minister in his own right from 1970 until his death in 1976. Aside from his
personal ties to Razak, several of Samad's protégés now served on Razak's
staff or in other senior positions in the government. As a consequence,
Samad was party to high-level dialogues and was sometimes called upon to
assist the government or the ruling party. When Singapore joined Malaysia,
for example, he helped Razak and UMNO meet the political challenge of Lee
Kuan Yew, who busily established PAP branches on the peninsula and
campaigned for a Malaysian Malaysia-meaning political equality for all
citizens irrespective of their Chinese, Malay, or Indian ethnic identities.
Samad argued that "you cannot have political equity without economic
equity…otherwise, one side will be at a disadvantage." This became one of
UMNO's driving themes and later, after 1969, the rationale for Malaysia's
New Economic Policy.
Razak also called on Samad to assist with the Indonesia problem. Working
outside official channels, Samad contacted leaders of several nonaligned
countries-Sukarno's ostensible allies-and solicited their support for
Malaysia. Through Adam Malik and other contacts in Indonesia, he also
learned, and passed along to worried Malaysian leaders, that Sukarno lacked
support for his assault on Malaysia among significant elements of the
Indonesian power structure. (Indeed, when Sukarno was overthrown in 1965,
Confrontation was immediately abandoned by Indonesia's new military rulers.)
As these crises passed, Samad weighed in on other nation-building issues.
One of these was language. Samad had long been a champion of Malay as a
foundation of Malay identity and culture and long worried that Malay would
"only survive if the people…use it, develop it, and nurture it." He had
helped to establish the Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (Language and Literature
Council) in 1957 and continued to participate in its congresses. He now
supported those who argued that Malay should supercede English (and, in some
cases, Chinese) as the primary language of instruction in Malaysia's
schools. This was, he said, part of a process in which education was
"revised and transformed as a means and instrument of unity." The idea was
to advance Malay both as a language of learning and as a national lingua
franca-a common tongue. ("But I never advocated Malay at the expense of
Chinese…or Indian languages or even English," he says. "My stand has always
been that you must be bilingual.") In the same spirit, Samad staunchly
supported the creation of a national university. One measure of his
authority on this issue was his appointment as deputy chair of the National
University Sponsoring Committee, which brought the project to fruition in
1970 with the opening of Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (Malaysian National
University) in Kuala Lumpur.
A matter of analogous concern was the absence in Malaysia of a truly
national newspaper. The Straits Times and its sister publications, including
Berita Harian (and its weekly magazine, Berita Minggu), were all owned and
managed by a Singapore-based and still largely British-owned company.
Singapore was now a separate state with interests of its own, interests
defined and driven by Lee Kuan Yew. A newspaper based there, Samad felt,
could not adequately address Malaysia's needs or be an instrument in its
development. In addition, whereas Malaysia's first prime minister, Tunku
Abdul Rahman, had cordial relations with the Times and its owners, this was
not so for his successor, Tun Razak. In 1972, Samad was party to maneuvers
within Razak's group involving Razaleigh Hamzah, UMNO's treasurer and
Razak's finance minister, to force the Straits Times to sell its Kuala
Lumpur-based operations to Malaysian owners. In this somewhat hostile
takeover, Samad worked quietly behind the scenes to foster an industrial
action by Times employees to weaken the Singapore company's position. The
bitter strike dragged on and on and, says Samad, "They were losing money
like hell. So, ultimately they gave up and agreed to the takeover." The
result was a new corporation owned by interests linked closely to the
Malaysian state and UMNO: the New Straits Times Press Malaysia, Berhad.
Samad was managing editor. One Straits Times veteran, Ahmad Sebi, called the
takeover "the biggest coup in the history of Malaysian journalism."
Intrigues like these and the almost limitless demands of his newspaper
filled Samad's days. But for many years, beginning in the mid-1960s, Samad
devoted his nights to a new literary project. He had written fiction since
his teen years and excelled in the short story. He now explored the novel
and with such gusto that, between 1966 and 1970, he completed nine of them,
beginning with Hud in 1967 and ending with Hussein Zet in 1970. (Four of
them were mysteries.) Samad's novels dwell on the themes most dear to him:
Malay language and culture, nationalism and its permutations in recent Malay
history, journalism and the writing life, and the everyday lives of ordinary
Malays as they coped with the opportunities and the unfulfilled hopes of
life in their new nation.
Samad's novels depict Malays in their full humanity: they quarrel and sin
and intrigue against each other; they also act nobly and display love and
loyalty. Likewise, he does not stigmatize Chinese and Indians but renders
them also as people capable of good and bad. As David Banks has written,
Samad's novels, "debunk the image of a stable multi-ethnic Malay rural
society." There are interracial love affairs. Samad's stories are small
stories and his characters are small people. In Hussein Zet, a former
independence activist and partisan of the Indonesian revolution makes a
living swindling his fellow Malays, in part by manipulating their
nationalist ideals. In another, Detik-detik Cemas (Anxious Moments), a
Chinese student researcher named Jenny assists a group of poor Malay
squatters to gain secure possession of the land they had long occupied. In
his stories, people attempt to rise in life against odds dictated by their
social class and education. Not surprisingly, he uses his novels to make
certain points: that so much of a person's outlook in life is dictated by
economic circumstances; that people should not forever be labeled by their
past associations, including political ones; and that among Malays and
Malaysians in general, tolerance must be embraced and practiced.
In typical fashion, Samad wrote his novels quickly, beating away at his
typewriter into the early morning hours, with coffee and cigarettes at hand
and passing along the rough copy to an assistant to clean up. This was often
Usman Awang (whose pen name was Tongkat Warrant), who says, "A. Samad Ismail
was habitually lazy when it came to reading his manuscripts.… He would
simply throw them at me. I had to act as his subeditor, correcting his
language, and also his proofreader, putting the commas and the full stops,
the semi-colons, and the question marks. His spelling was appalling."
As managing editor of the New Straits Times Press, Samad was officially
Number Two. "But I was in charge of the whole administration," he says.
Aside from setting up the Group as a bilingual news operation in its own
right, separate from Singapore, Samad had now to implement the Malaysian
government's New Economic Policy (NEP). This policy of affirmative action
had been launched after ethnic riots involving Malays and Chinese erupted in
1969. Its aim, through direct government intervention, was to redress the
imbalance in Malaysia's economy in which opportunities in education and the
professions and particularly in business were heavily weighted in favor of
non-Malays, especially the ethnic Chinese. Under the NEP, such opportunities
would be mandated by law. At the New Straits Times, Samad says, "I had a
mandate from the prime minister to revamp the paper, to revamp the
administration, and to sack and to promote and to recruit people in
accordance with the NEP." At the time, many administrative posts in the
organization were still occupied by expatriates. "I had to either cut short
their contracts or sack them," says Samad. Meanwhile, the law now required
that every department employ 30 percent Malays, or bumiputras (indigenous
persons). It was "a very big shake-up."
In his role at the New Straits Times Press and at Berita Harian and as a
prolific writer of fiction and a public intellectual, Samad was playing a
key role in the Malaysian national project. Singapore, which was now
independent under Lee Kuan Yew and the PAP, had "taken on an alien look,"
wrote Samad's wife Hamidah. Abdul Samad Ismail was Malaysian now. And
although he did not participate in politics in quite the same way that he
had in the past, as a confidante of Prime Minister Tun Razak (and his
sometime traveling companion and speechwriter), he was wholly engaged until
Razak's death in January 1976. The following month, Malaysia's new prime
minister, Hussein Onn, honored Samad with the country's highest literary
award. He was named Pejuang Sastra (Literary Pioneer) for his role in
promoting Malay as a national language. Just five weeks later, however,
Samad's world came suddenly crashing down.
Samad's influential positions and his proximity to Razak, not to mention his
own predilection for intrigue, inevitably drew him into political power
struggles. Just as inevitably, these power struggles created enemies. In
important elections, his newspaper backed certain UMNO candidates and
opposed others. In the New Straits Times and Berita Harian, he railed
against corruption in government and, for example, led a campaign against
the UMNO Youth Wing (Pemuda UMNO) for exploiting its insider position to
gain favored business contracts in connection with building the new national
university. When the Razak government's Anti-Corruption Agency launched an
investigation against Harun Idris, a rising star in UMNO, Samad refused to
use his influence to conceal the investigation or rein it in. (Aside from
his ties to Razak, one of Samad's in-laws was deputy director of the
corruption agency.) Harun Idris was eventually convicted of corruption and
jailed. He struck back by accusing Samad of being a communist. This was a
charge that resonated with certain UMNO power seekers such as Tan Sri
Ghazali Shafie, the minister of home affairs and an ardent Cold Warrior and
anticommunist.
Meanwhile, in Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew was cracking down on dissident voices
in his now one-party state. In June 1976, he arrested Hussein Jahiddin, the
editor of Berita Harian in Singapore and someone Samad had personally
vouched for. Azmi Mahmud, a Berita Harian reporter with close family ties to
Samad, was also arrested. Hussein and Azmi had been writing editorials
critical of Singaporean policies, infuriating Lee. "But Harry thought these
fellows wouldn't dare write these articles without my encouragement," says
Samad. "He thought I was still in control in Singapore. So he had these
fellows arrested. He made these fellows confess that I was behind it all."
Indeed, under investigation by the Lee authorities, Hussein and Azmi
confessed to being party to a communist plot to undermine the governments of
Singapore and Malaysia; they implicated Samad. A few days later, on 22 June
1976, at the recommendation of Home Affairs Minister Ghazalie, Prime
Minister Hussein Onn approved the arrest of Samad under the country's
Emergency-era Internal Security Act, under which a person may be detained
indefinitely without charge or trial. Samad was then induced to read a
televised confession that (as the Far Eastern Economic Review reported it)
"he had for years infiltrated and influenced the top leadership of the
United Malays Nationalist [sic] Organization under the direction of a
Jakarta communist." Samad says, now, "I didn't write that." But power was
not on his side. Ghazalie Shafie had his way, and Samad spent the next four
and a half years in jail.
For some eight months, Samad was held in a solitary cell, after which he was
transferred to a house and then back to a cell again. The switching went on
throughout his incarceration without any particular rhyme or reason. "They
just want to disorient you," he says. "You enjoy living in a bungalow for a
few months, then you go back to a cell, in solitary-just to break you down
mentally." Meanwhile, the family's bungalow in Kuala Lumpur grew quiet. As
Hamidah noted to Samad's longtime friend and collaborator, Usman Awang, "We
have very few guests." Most of Samad and Hamidah's ten children were grown
or nearly grown. But the youngest daughter, Nur Azrina, was still in grade
school, where children taunted her as a child of a 'communist.'"
By 1981, the political winds had shifted again and onetime UMNO outcaste,
Dr. Mahathir Mohammad, had gained control of the party and become prime
minister. "It was Mahathir who insisted that I should be released," says
Samad. Samad was required to make a second televised confession admitting to
having been led astray by communists and to having now seen the light. Home
Affairs Minister Ghazalie Shafie pronounced, "Samad Ismail has responded
satisfactorily to rehabilitation and has turned over a new leaf." And
suddenly Samad was free again.
Almost immediately, Samad was received back into Malaysia's media world. For
eight months, he served as consultant to the Star newspaper group and then
rejoined the New Straits Times Group as editorial adviser, a position he
held until his formal retirement in 1987. His new post gave him a high
profile but little authority. "My function was to improve the quality of the
paper," he says. "But I didn't have direct dealings with the staff." The
company had grown larger and more complex and impersonal in his absence. The
office politics troubled him. "I was quite disappointed." Nevertheless, he
threw himself into his work like a demon. Ahmad Sebi, who was a senior
editor at Berita Harian at the time, wrote, "His colleagues can testify to
the fact that he works seven days a week…he is still at it. He is in the
newspaper office all day and seems to be everywhere at the same time, yet he
gets his work done." In the midst of his work for the New Straits Times
Group in 1984, Samad also planned the news division for Malaysia's first
private television station, TV Three.
Improbably, given his recent vilification and incarceration, Samad now
assumed a new public role-that of paterfamilias of Malay journalism. In
1987, the national university he had helped to establish named him an
honorary doctor of letters. The university's citation lauded him as a giant
in the field of Malaysian journalism and literature, a "champion of the
Malay language, and a political activist and genuine nationalist." His
post-detention position at the New Straits Times, it said, "cleared all
accusations made against him during his detention." In 1992, he was knighted
and given the title Tan Sri by the king of Malaysia himself, the Yang
di-Pertuan Agong. Samad quipped to reporters: "Now I don't have to look over
my shoulder to see if I am being followed."
After retirement, Samad continued to write prolifically, producing a
continuous stream of articles on public issues in both English and Malay and
two regular columns in Malay-one for Berita Harian and the other for
Nusantara. He lectured widely on language and journalism and expressed
himself vividly on matters that troubled him, such as corruption in
government, the spoliation of Malaysia's forests and rivers and other
examples of opportunistic materialism, and the need to enhance and protect
the rights of Muslim women. So fast and dramatically have political events
reshaped the region of Samad's youth that some of his onetime dreams-such as
Nusantara or a Greater Indonesia-now seem implausible at best. But Samad
seems to have accepted the alternative outcome. "Now," he says, "you find a
different Nusantara." It is found in economic ties and in cultural
affiliations that transcend states and religions. "You can recognize in a
Filipino or a Malay or in an Indonesian a commonness…the way you talk, the
way you dress-in cultural norms and values."
At the same time, Malaysia has become Samad's nation. He has embraced it.
And much that is on his mind these days has to do with Malaysia and with the
place of journalism and the press within it. In his younger days-not so long
ago-journalists acted at the center of community life; they played a key
role in shaping the destiny of their still-colonized societies, "exhorting
the people to change their traditional ways and their thinking, urging them
on to accept progress and modernism." As Samad said in accepting his
honorary degree in 1987, "my contemporaries in journalism had to assume…the
twin roles of elite and political agitator." In this, he says, journalists
and politicians worked hand-in-hand; under colonial rule, both were equally
powerless. Now things have changed. "The journalist naturally has to
persevere in his role as the champion of causes," he says. "The politician
now has power firmly in his hands." This creates tension.
At the same time, journalism itself has been transformed. In his lifetime,
newspapers moved from handset type to the Linotype machine to computers. And
newspaper organizations have grown from small cash-strapped enterprises to
large media conglomerates. In his youth, Samad and his fellow reporters made
little money and lived lives akin to those of the community in general. Now,
he says, journalists are "middle class" and lead lives that are "alien to
the mass of urban workers and rural peasantry." Journalism has become less
of a vocation and more of an occupation defined by certificates and
diplomas. "At best," he says, "journalism is increasingly seen as a craft
that places emphasis on professional skill; at worst, it is alarmingly
becoming only a nine-to-five job."
Furthermore, in his early newspapering days, it was easier than now to say
who, exactly, a newspaper was speaking to, and for. Utusan Melayu was
unselfconsciously a voice for Malays and for Malay aspirations. But
newspapers of national stature today, such as the New Straits Times and
Berita Harian, cannot speak for one constituency alone. Indeed, Malaysia has
a multiplicity of voices, says Samad, "that of the urban elite, the liberal,
the Western-oriented, of the locally educated, of those educated in the
vernacular languages, or the rural rich and poor." What is needed is "a
sense of judgment that is balanced and fair to the interests of every sector
of the readership." Finding that "sense of judgment" is the responsibility
of the press.
Samad believes the press should be as free as possible but he is not a
libertarian. The nation itself is too vulnerable, and too valuable. The
right to freedom of expression (as with other rights) should be exercised
"responsibly and judiciously." So even as he campaigns for greater media
freedom, Samad argues that "our nation's survival as an independent and
sovereign entity should be our supreme and overriding concern as citizens.
Whatever our professional interests," he says, "the nation's need must
prevail."
Samad's wife Hamidah, who became a renowned writer in her own right, died in
1991. He dedicated the first installment of his memoirs to her. Their ten
children, all grown, are settled in Malaysia and Singapore (which Samad can
now visit again after being banned for fifteen years). In 1993, Samad
married Habibah binte Abdul Hamid. As an elder statesman of Malaysian
journalism and an astute political and social observer, Samad keeps his
sensitive fingers close to the pulse of Malaysia. He has much to say about
the health of the nation. But, if asked, he is just as likely to be terse
and say, characteristically, "So far, so good."
James R. Rush
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