Saturday April 26, 2008
Farewell to a true Malaysian
By JOMO K.S.
Generous in spirit and encouraging of younger talents, Rustam Sani never hesitated to give his all to the writing he enjoyed, regardless of the sacrifices involved.
I WRITE this in haste from afar without the benefit of any reference material. But I must do so, as I have lost another brother, taken away before his time.
I first met Rustam Sani (pic) soon after joining the UKM economics faculty in early 1977, then still at its temporary campus in Pantai. The crammed facilities in the PKNS flats there forced a certain physical closeness which was, in turn, conducive to generating close personal relations.
Rustam was then in the Anthropology and Sociology Department with Halim Ali, Sanusi Osman, Hood Salleh, Dahlan Haji Aman, Ting Chew Peh, Cheu Hock Tong, Shamsul Amri and others, many of whom had been students of Syed Husin Ali at the University of Malaya in the 1960s.
Struggle for the Nation
Born towards the end of the Japanese Occupation in the Perak border town of Tanjung Malim, Rustam grew up in the shadow of his famous father, Abdullah Sani @ Ahmad Boestamam.
As a mature student at university, Rustam quickly established a reputation in his own right as an essayist, poet and pamphleteer in the Socialist Club and for promoting the national language at the University of Malaya.
He often joked that if he had agreed to run in the May 1969 election, he would have become Selangor Mentri Besar at the age of 25!
Instead, he opted to do a Masters at the University of Kent in Canterbury where he indulged and mentored a variety of undergraduates including PAS secretary-general Kamaruddin Jaffar, economist Ghazali Atan and publisher Lim Siang Jin.
There, he deepened his preoccupation with the challenges of Malaysian nationhood, an enduring theme in his writings since the 1970s, and the subject of one of his two latest books to be launched posthumously by his old friend from the 1960s, Anwar Ibrahim.
Soon after I joined UKM, I left for a semester to finish my thesis, returning only to find him preparing to leave soon after with his wife Rohani and young children Azrani and Ariani for Yale.
But after passing the tough comprehensive exams there, he lost interest, preferring instead to write a statistics textbook for those afraid of such quantitative methods.
Back at UKM, he switched to the Politics Department as his old Canterbury friend, then Abim secretary-general Kamaruddin, had left to join Anwar in Umno and the Government.
With Syed Husin at the helm of the Malaysian Social Science Association (PSSM), Rustam and I started a bilingual quarterly journal, Ilmu Masyarakat, to try to open new Malaysian debates under the dispensation of the then new (prime minister Datuk Seri Dr) Mahathir (Mohamad), to which the former UKM academic as well as PNB and Guthrie chief executive Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim (now Selangor Mentri Besar) was an early and insightful contributor.
Patriot and Statesman
At the end of the 1980s, Rustam accepted Nordin Sopiee’s invitation to join ISIS. There, he helped to craft Mahathir’s historic February 1991 speech promising a “Bangsa Malaysia” as part of his Vision 2020 (thankfully translated by Rustam as Wawasan 2020, instead of the earlier Visi 2020), changing the terms of national discourse in one fell swoop.
Frustrated by its lack of serious commitment, he left ISIS in the mid-1990s to become a writer, translator and reluctant businessman.
Soon after, he agreed to become deputy president of PSSM, later inaugurating the biennial series of international Malaysian Studies Conferences in which we tried to reposition Malaysian studies as a national – and nationalist – discourse, rather than as post-colonial studies.
However, the events of 1997-99 disrupted our plans, and Rustam rose to the popular national call for reformasi following Anwar’s incarceration and persecution, becoming its most thoughtful “participant observer”.
As deputy president of the party his father had founded almost half a century before, he negotiated its principled unification with the political movement which had emerged around Anwar despite several high profile defections.
Rustam was always a reluctant politician and had little patience for the intrigues which seemed to preoccupy some of his counterparts, including fellow former academics.
Generous in spirit and encouraging of younger talents, he never hesitated to give his all to the writing he enjoyed, regardless of the sacrifices involved.
Although principled, he never claimed the high moral ground or used his language, writing and other talents to put others down.
Although I only saw him a few times after leaving the country in 2004, we kept in touch. This year's March 8 must have given him great satisfaction indeed, as he saw the people give the nation another chance.
He must also be pleased that Anwar – another son of the Burhanuddin Helmi tradition to which he himself belonged – launched his last two books as he moves to take his rightful place in our nation’s history.
Nationalist father
BOESTAMAM had been a young follower of the Kesatuan Melayu Muda (KMM) from the late 1930s in Perak, emerging after the war as the militant youth leader of API (Angkatan Pemuda Insaf) to the older and more moderate Dr Burhanuddin Helmi and Ishak Haji Muhammad (Pak Sako) of the Malay Nationalist Party (PKMM).
PKMM, in turn, led Putera (Pusat Tenaga Rakyat) which joined with the Malayan Democratic Union (MDU)- led All Malayan Council of Joint Action (AMCJA) to craft the People’s Constitution in 1947 as the basis for Malayan independence, years before Umno switched its slogan from “Hidup Melayu” to “Merdeka” under Tunku Abdul Rahman’s leadership.
Boes was detained without trial for seven long years from early 1948, before the Emergency was declared in mid-1948, together with thousands of other Malay youths demanding independence.
This pre-emptive repression by the colonial power was to ethnically colour the subsequent anticolonial resistance.
Soon after his release in 1955, he set up the Partai Rakyat Malaya, and later joined with the Labour Party of Malaya, chaired by Pak Sako, to create the Socialist Front.
Detained again without trial over the mid-60s, Boes faded from the headlines of Malaysian politics.
Jomo K.S. is United Nations Assistant Secretary-General for Economic Development and collaborated with the late Rustam Sani for over three decades.
- Malacca CM: Indonesian workers can work in Malacca and return home daily
- Liow accepts Astro host apology over blackout posting
- TV9 exec murder: Court sets June 26 for mention
- Cameron Highlands: Pos Terisu clearing is legal, says Pahang MB
- Cops bust ‘bomoh’ cheating syndicate from China
- Raja Nazrin: Integrity can be strengthened if law is enforced without fear
- Man jailed 10 years for sodomising six-year-old girl
- Zahid promises no political interference in police force
- Rally to go ahead, says Chegubard
- Discipline teacher acquitted of molesting 11 teenage girls
- Yazid, two others acquitted and discharged from Sosma
- Three gold bars missing from Penang Hindu Endowment Board
- Two handicraft makers to hang for drug trafficking
- Guan Eng should apologise to me, says Zahid
- Adnan Yaakob announces new portfolios for 10 excos
- Affin Q1 earnings decline on lower share from associate
- Tenaga unit issues RM1.62b Sukuk for Penang power plant
- Fajar Baru posts RM1.5m net profit, optimistic on growth
- Malaysia's KLCI closes nearly 8pt up, IOI Corp, CIMB advance
- Little sign Abe can shake up Japan's inbound FDI
- Ideal Jacobs steps up expansion in China
- TH Plantations to complete Kalimantan land purchase by June
- Time dotCom in search of more acquisitions
- Battersea Power Station's Phase 1 records RM3.12b sales
- Maybank considering internal, external candidates for CEO
- Instacom bags RM205m telco job in Sarawak
- BToto hopes to list business trust in Singapore end-August
- KLCI up nearly 8pt midday, banks, O&G lead gainers (Update)
- Despite curbs, China's vast hot money triangle flourishes
- RHB Research maintains Neutral on auto sector
- Golf: Johnson triumphs by one stroke at Mobile Bay LPGA
- Chong Wei urges team-mates to bounce back from shock defeat to Taiwan
- Kien Keat-Boon Heong may not play in Group C tie against Germany
- Koo-Tan’s stunning loss rocks Malaysian camp
- Kjaersfeldt ready to continue strong Danish tradition
- Sindhu shines for India after spectacular performance
- Danial shatters 100m mark as four records fall on opening day
- Pavithraa in sizzling form despite the heat
- Wee Wern relishes playing at unique venue ... a football stadium
- Coach Irving has no doubts Nicol will peak at the right time
- ‘Comeback king’ Timothy lands his second title
- KLHC to the fore again
- New Cheras velodrome may steal limelight from RM80mil Labu project
- Azlan and Zamri do Malaysia proud in ARRC race at Sentul
- Broken clutch lever costs Hafizh dearly in Le Mans
- Abdul Wahid and Paul Low taking huge pay cuts
- MPs can earn up to RM10,000 per month
- DAP unhappy over Selangor exco positions
- Take action against Kian Ming, voter told
- Rafizi reveals eight not allowed to vote during GE13
- Stern action awaits rally-goers
- Guan Eng should apologise to me, says Zahid
- Utusan says no to AirAsia ads
- Prosecution given until June 6 to decide on rape-marry case
- Astro presenter’s Facebook post on Bentong ‘blackout’ draws more flak
- MPs can earn up to RM10,000 per month
- Ten important items for you to prepare for the inevitable
- Professionals warn there is too much of office space in the Klang Valley
- Abdul Wahid and Paul Low taking huge pay cuts
- Liow accepts Astro host apology over blackout posting
- Should Sime Darby also demerge; big values can be created by spinning off companies
- Malacca CM: Indonesian workers can work in Malacca and return home daily
- Battersea Power Station's Phase 1 records RM3.12b sales
- Take action against Kian Ming, voter told
- Stern action awaits rally-goers

