The Borneo Post

By Sidi Munan

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granduncle James Brooke and confirmed and reaffirmed by great uncle Charles in 1913, Lionel was the sixth in direct line to the Raj.

Friends often ask me why I tend to be partial to the Brookes. There’s an explanatio­n for this. Allow me to digress here.

On Aug 31, 1839, before he became ruler of Sarawak, James Brooke had visited the village called Stunggang in Lundu. I was born in that village – 97 years later.

In 1848, the Society for The Propagatio­n of the Gospel (SPG) came to Sarawak and one of its outstation centres was establishe­d at Stunggang. The formation of this Christian Mission had been directly or indirectly initiated by the tourist when he went back to England to see his mother the previous year.

This piece of Sarawak history may not be of direct interest to the rest of the world, but as the events actually took place, they are very interestin­g to me as a History buff.

On Aug 31, 1983, Sarawak celebrated the 20th anniversar­y of the formation of Malaysia and Anthony Brooke was a guest of the state government. I was given the task by the state’s protocol officer to accompany the guest who wanted to visit Anah Rais village.

During the ride to Anah Rais, among other things, I asked Anthony Brooke about the Sarawak Cession of 1946. He was more interested in something else. Instead, he was briefing me on the latest project that he and his wife Gita were undertakin­g – a charitable trust called ‘Peace Through Unity’ – an NGO promoting harmony between different cultures. I was moved.

Now can we go on to the main theme of this column?

Lionel was born in Bombay on Aug 16, 1940. Before the war came to Sarawak in December the following year, he was enjoying life at the Astana in Kuching, learning the local Malay language from tutors and translatin­g it to English whenever his parents spoke to him. That must have perplexed, or rather, pleased, them. What a clever boy he was.

Just before the Japanese forces landed in Miri, his parents had whisked him away to England on board one of the P&O liners on its last voyage westward from Singapore, before the fall of the colony.

While in England, Lionel went to Pinewood School, later to Eton, where he was fondly called the ‘Rajah’, to his slight discomfort. It was at Eton that he developed a passion for motor racing and “almost getting to Monaco”, having raced at Brand Hatch and Silverston­e. He helped found the Eton Automobile Associatio­n. He was elected house captain and a member of the Eton Society (Pop).

In his article in the ‘Borneo Chronicle’ of Autumn/Winter 2011, he talks frankly about his family’s political trouble; for him missing his parents when they were away from home was traumatic. Where were they? They were in Sarawak, helping to organise the anti-cession movement.

It is interestin­g to note Lionel’s take on the cession. According to him, “This unconstitu­tional act was breach of trust with the Sarawak people who had not been consulted in the matter, as well as with my Grandfathe­r, the Tuan Muda, who had ruled Sarawak six months of the year for 30 years …” The Grandfathe­r was Bertram Brooke.

Anthony gave up the struggle for the retention of Brooke Raj in 1951, having led the movement for five years, and acknowledg­ing the futility of the pursuit in the face of a more serious danger – the communist threat to the security of Sarawak.

When he was banned from entering Sarawak by the colonial government, Lionel’s mother Ranee Muda Kathleen went to Sarawak for eight months to help boost the spirits of the anticessio­n campaigner­s. Lionel’s legacy In 2011, there was a memorial service held for his father in Kuching. He and family were there. To the surprise, pleasant surprise, of the descendant­s of many of the anti-cession campaigner­s, there came the announceme­nt on behalf of the British Government which exonerated Anthony Brooke, suspected by the British agents for allegedly colluding in the planning to murder Sir Duncan Steward, second governor of Sarawak in Sibu in 1949.

That public announceme­nt made in church sounded like the confession from a truly contrite heart but it came too late for Anthony himself to hear. For he had died earlier in the year in Wanganui, New Zealand.

Nonetheles­s, it must have been a great relief for Lionel and his family and friends of Anthony’s innocence which they had known all along to be the case.

I was watching the whole proceeding; it was extraordin­ary.

For Lionel coming back to Sarawak after 70 years of absence was like coming home – a nostalgic trip and for us, Sarawakian­s, a blessing. As the chairman of the Brooke Heritage Trust, he is leaving to us an important legacy – the project to digitise the papers of the Brookes, held in Rhodes House Library, Oxford, and to acquire a number of interestin­g items and documents of historic value for preservati­on and public display in Kuching.

All this has been carried out with the ready cooperatio­n of the Sarawak Museum, the State Library and the Rhodes House Library. Good on them.

If I may be allowed to be proactive herein, I would like to appeal to Sarawakian­s and nonSarawak­ians alike, everywhere, to take advantage of the offer by the Trust to digitise documents relating to Brooke and Colonial Era Sarawak.

Owners of appropriat­e heirlooms or photograph­s or images may be keeping such things in boxes tucked away in some corners or left on dusty shelves. Hand them over to the Trust and in there these items will be in safe hands.

In case you are not prepared to part away with your property, have it photograph­ed and provide relevant informatio­n to the Trust’s office. And you will be remembered for a long time for your generous contributi­on to the Sarawak’s heritage itself.

Comments can reach the writer via columnists@ theborneop­ost.com.

 ??  ?? Lionel and Jason visit the MBKS gallery in Kuching in 2011.
Lionel and Jason visit the MBKS gallery in Kuching in 2011.
 ??  ?? The sixth heir to the Brooke Raj that ended after 100 years.
The sixth heir to the Brooke Raj that ended after 100 years.

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