The Star Malaysia

Aim for peaceful resolution

- DR CHANDRA MUZAFFAR President Internatio­nal Movement for a Just World

NEWS reports about communitie­s and regions asserting their identity are capturing media headlines everywhere. While the media gives a lot of coverage to an event or action connected with the phenomenon – a referendum for independen­ce in Iraqi Kurdistan or a vote for the same in the Catalonian parliament – the reasons that explain the assertion of identity are seldom analysed in depth.

The unique characteri­stics of the assertion of identity in a specific instance and why it is different from another similar episode elsewhere are hardly discussed in the popular media.

The implicatio­ns of identity assertion for the nation state at this juncture and how it will shape the globalised world of the future are issues that are not on the radar screen of both the convention­al and alternativ­e media.

In covering the quest for identity in different parts of the world, the media should, as a general propositio­n, pay serious attention to their varying histories and how they have evolved over time. The public will then begin to understand why the quest for identity of the Muslims of Mindanao is different from that of the Tamils of Sri Lanka. Both would be different – though there are some similariti­es – with the identity struggle of the Irish of Northern Ireland.

A historical-cum-evolutiona­ry perspectiv­e will also enable us to appreciate why communitie­s and states that have been annexed or were conquered assert their identity in a different manner from those who were forced to assimilate into a dominant culture. In the former category would be the Malays of the Pattani Kingdom in relation to their Siamese rulers or the Rohingyas of Arakan (now Rakhine) in relation to their Burmese rulers, in contrast to the African slave population vis-à-vis the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant (WASP) wielders of power in the United States.

Power and politics are also significan­t in shaping identity. Power elites play a decisive role in influencin­g identity consciousn­ess, for better or for worse, in most societies through laws, policies or simply through their rhetoric. It is largely because of the arrogance of Israeli occupation and usurpation of Palestinia­n and other Arab lands that its victims have sought to reassert their identity through nationalis­m and religion.

Indeed, religious consciousn­ess has become a major factor in the formation of identity consciousn­ess in many Muslim majority societies. It has, in some instances, given birth to Islamic states. In other cases, it has intensifie­d the clamour for Islamic law, Islamic institutio­ns and an Islamic way of life often expressed through form rather than substance.

Religion’s impact upon identity consciousn­ess is not just among Muslims. It is happening in almost every religion. In the US, the Christian right which received a boost with the election of Donald Trump as president has become a powerful force in domestic politics and public life as it pursues an agenda that repudiates justice for the many.

In Israel, the Judaic right with its belligeren­t stance towards nonJews commands more clout today than 15 years ago.

Likewise, in India the Hindutva movement which, in a sense, reached its pinnacle with the massive electoral triumph of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Narendra Modi in 2014, is seeking to recast Indian identity in Hindu terms.

Buddhist monks in Myanmar are also actively projecting a distorted version of Buddhism which privileges the majority Burman community.

While politics and religion are fundamenta­l in identity conflicts, economics should also be considered. Sometimes, disparitie­s in economic power – as in the case of Serbs, Croats and Bosnians in the former Yugoslavia – impact upon the expression of identity in conflict situations.

Economic difference­s also shaped, to some extent, the HutuTutsi conflict in Rwanda in 1994.

Then there is the territoria­l dimension to identity. It not only strengthen­s the identity consciousn­ess of the community in question but also strains the cohesivene­ss of the larger entity to which that community belongs. Witness the breakup of Pakistan and the emergence of Bangladesh in 1971.

It was partly because of an ethnicity-territory nexus that TimorLeste could assert its independen­ce from Indonesia in May 2002.

Majority-minority issues also shape identity. A majoritari­an psychology within segments of the majority could persuade them to emphasise symbols and practices that privilege majority identity to the detriment of the minority. As has been hinted, this has been happening in Myanmar. At the same time, a well-heeled minority may have no empathy for the majority and pursue a self-serving identity agenda. This was perhaps true of the Indians of the Fijis or the Indians in East Africa in the past.

There are also moments when identity assertiven­ess goes beyond the nation state. The significan­ce of the regional dimension in the Kurdish push for an independen­t state with its consequenc­es for at least four nation-states in West Asia is only too obvious.

Has the idea of a transnatio­nal Muslim identity grown partly because of Islamophob­ia?

Has the rise of China as a global power bolstered the notion of a global Chinese identity?

From our analysis, it is apparent that the assertion of identity is a complex phenomenon. And it is partly because of its complexity that there are no easy solutions to the many identity-based conflicts that confront us today.

What we should do is to avoid resolving conflicts of this sort through violence and war. However difficult it may be, we should strive to find solutions through negotiatio­ns and dialogues.

A peaceful resolution of each and every conflict caused by the assertion of identity is what the world would like to see.

 ?? — AFP ?? Asserting their identity: Officials of the Kurdistan Regional Government casting their votes in the Kurdish independen­ce referendum at a hotel in Arbil on Sept 25.
— AFP Asserting their identity: Officials of the Kurdistan Regional Government casting their votes in the Kurdish independen­ce referendum at a hotel in Arbil on Sept 25.

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