History
is taught differently in schools these days (and this is the view of historian Ranjit
Singh Malhi). And these includes:
-Orang
Asli Were Here First — But Malaysia’s Textbooks Refuse to Admit It
-The Original Owners ( Orang Asli ) of
Malaysia Completely Erased from Our School Textbooks
-
Parameswara Never Converted to Islam in 1414
-
How Malaysian Textbooks Tried to Delete the Chinese Contribution to Malaysia
-
Yap Ah Loy: The Man Who Built Kuala Lumpur But Was Erased from History
-
Tin Mining, Agriculture, KL — The Massive Chinese Role Malaysian Textbooks Hid
-
750,000 Indians Died Building Malaysia — But Textbooks Don’t Even Mention Them
-
South Indians Built Modern Malaysia — Why Are They Erased from History?
-
The Forgotten Indian Slaves Who Built Malaysia’s Roads, Rails & Economy
Source:
https://commons.wikimedia.org
Unfortunately,
since 1996, young Malaysians have been learning a form of
‘government-sanctioned history’. The problem of historical distortion extends
beyond school textbooks, beginning with the Form One volume in 2016 and the
Form Five volume in 2020. The Form Two school history textbook (2017, page 82)
perpetuates the myth that Parameswara converted to Islam in 1414. Several
ethno-nationalist historians go further, asserting that Parameswara, upon
conversion, adopted the name Megat Iskandar Shah. This claim collapses under
the weight of historical evidence.
As
stated by the late Emeritus Professor Tan Sri Dr Khoo Kay Kim in his book Malay
Society: Transformation and Democratisation, "It is almost certain that
his [Parameswara’s] son succeeded him in 1414, assuming the title of Megat
Iskandar Shah." Indeed, the Ming Shih-lu (reliable Ming records) state
explicitly that Megat Iskandar Shah came to Emperor Yung-lo’s court on 5
October 1414 and declared that his father, Parameswara, had died. Leading
scholars including OW Wolters, CH Wake, Mary Turnbull, and BW and LY Andaya
(besides Sejarah Melayu) concur that the first Melaka ruler to embrace Islam in
the 1430s was Seri Maharaja, who assumed the name Muhammad Shah.
The
phenomenal role played by Yap Ah Loy in developing Kuala Lumpur has been
virtually silenced in our history textbooks. Worse still, two local historians
have claimed, despite clear-cut and contradictory evidence, that Raja Abdullah
was the founder of Kuala Lumpur and that the town originated and developed as a
Malay settlement. Contemporary ‘people on the spot’ – including Frank
Swettenham, who later became the Resident of Selangor in 1882, and William
Hornaday, an American zoologist who visited Kuala Lumpur in 1878 – tell a
different story. So do earlier history textbooks, such as the Form Four history
textbook published by Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka in 1979 and Standard Four
History textbook published by Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka in 1981.
Official
records, including the 1879 Police Census of Kuala Lumpur and the 1959 Kuala
Lumpur Municipal Council publication, together with the works of leading
authorities on Kuala Lumpur’s early history such as JM Gullick and SM
Middlebrook, all converge on two critical and indisputable facts:
Kuala
Lumpur originated and developed primarily as a Chinese township, and Yap Ah Loy
(third Kapitan Cina, 1868–1885) was primarily responsible for its development.
According
to Frank Swettenham, a British colonial administrator, Kuala Lumpur in 1872 was
“a purely Chinese village, consisting of two rows of adobe-built dwellings
thatched with palm leaves”. In a similar
vein, the 1879 Police Census of Selangor reveals that Kuala Lumpur’s population
stood at 2,330, of whom 82 per cent were Chinese.
Raja
Abdullah’s (the district chief of Klang) only claim to being the founder of
Kuala Lumpur rests on the incidental fact that he sent 87 Chinese miners in
1857 to mine tin ore in Ampang, which was a different district altogether from
Kuala Lumpur. As stated by JM Gullick, Kuala Lumpur grew from the settlement
established in 1859 by the first Kapitan Cina of Kuala Lumpur, Hiu Siew, and
his business partner Ah Sze, near the confluence of the Klang and Gombak rivers
(formerly Old Market Square and now Medan Pasar). Significantly, the Kuala
Lumpur Municipal Council celebrated Kuala Lumpur’s 100th anniversary in 1959,
not in 1957.
Perhaps
one of the most serious shortcomings of our school history textbooks is their
denial of the historical role and significance of the Orang Asli. There is no
acknowledgment of them as the original inhabitants or “sons of the soil” of
Peninsular Malaysia.
Nor
is there mention of their crucial role in early international trade as
collectors of forest produce, their service as porters and guides, their
appointment as Penghulus and their role as the fighting force during the Melaka
Sultanate, and the historical fact that Minangkabau immigrants in Negeri
Sembilan married Orang Asli women to establish land rights through the female
line.
Additionally,
Malaya’s Indonesian population (mainly Javanese, Banjarese, Sumatrans, Bugis,
and Boyanese or Baweanese) increased from approximately 30,000 in 1901 to about
240,000 in 1931.
The
‘government-sanctioned history’ also downplays the profound and enduring impact
of Hindu-Buddhist influence on Malay statecraft, coronation ceremonies of Malay
rulers, language, literature, and customs. As stated by Ismail Hamid in his
book Masyarakat dan Budaya Melayu (1988, page 55), “… kebudayaan Hindu telah
meninggalkan beberapa kesan dalam setiap bidang kehidupan orang Melayu hingga
dewasa ini”.
The
textbooks have also omitted the pioneering role of the Chinese in
nineteenth-century commercial agriculture and minimized their central
contribution to the development of Malaya’s tin mining industry. A glaring and
misleading error appears in the Form Three history textbook (2018, page 140),
which states that the British cultivated various commercial crops, including
pepper and gambier. In reality, pepper and gambier were cultivated largely by
the Chinese in Johor in the mid-nineteenth century. Equally alarming, instead
of giving due credit to Chinese entrepreneurs and miners, the Form Three
history textbook (2018, page 212) alludes that Long Jaafar, the territorial
chief of Larut, was primarily responsible for the Federated Malay States (FMS)
becoming the largest tin producer in the world. The undeniable truth is that
Long Jaafar died in 1857, whereas the FMS became the world’s largest tin
producer only towards the end of the nineteenth century.
Finally,
our history textbooks have largely marginalized the pivotal role of South
Indian labour in the development of the rubber industry, which became Malaya’s
principal revenue earner from 1916 and remained so for several decades
thereafter. Equally glaring is the total absence of any acknowledgment of the
indispensable contribution of South Indian workers to the construction of
Malaya’s physical infrastructure – its roads, railways, bridges, ports,
airports, and government buildings. As noted by Kernial Singh Sandhu, a leading
authority on Indians in Malaya, it is estimated that more than 750,000 Indians
may have perished in the process of developing modern Malaya and opening up
treacherous jungle tracts for rubber cultivation.
Historical
omissions, distortions, and half-truths are not harmless mistakes; they are
‘intellectual crimes’. Enough is enough.
It is time for all right-thinking Malaysians, regardless of ethnicity or
background, to stand united and demand better. Our children deserve an
education grounded in truth, evidence, and inclusivity. Only by teaching an
honest and inclusive history can we build a shared national identity, restore
trust in our institutions, and secure a just and united future for our beloved
nation.
May
God bless Malaysia – a nation founded on unity in diversity.
Reference:
They Silenced Orang Asli, Indians & Chinese – What They Don’t Want
Your Kids to Know About Malaysian History, Ranjit
Singh Malhi, The Coverage, 6 May 2026