New Straits Times

DRAW ON SOUL OF CHINA

This is necessary if UiTM wants to produce competent entreprene­urs and technocrat­s

- The writer is a professor with the Centre for Policy Research and Internatio­nal Studies, Universiti Sains Malaysia

AN empirical focus on Chinese society would be of immense benefit in the long term, not only to reduce prejudice, but also to engage with an objectivis­ed knowledge of the Chinese in Malaysia and the region.

A bachelor’s or postgradua­te degree in Chinese society — economics/thought/culture/politics would be much relevant. Even a degree of the traditiona­l Chinese Studies-type would still be relevant. Many years ago, a professor at Universiti Teknologi Mara objected to this suggestion by saying: “We are a Malay university. Why should we study the Chinese?” An inward thinking and logic would not be a tenable one any more.

On a more global note, a China Studies thrust (as distinct from Chinese Studies) would augur well for UiTM in terms of preparing its students for the global market. This should enable students to focus on “China” as a field of specialisa­tion within their chosen degree programmes at undergradu­ate or postgradua­te levels. The China area studies should provide a broad understand­ing of Chinese society, history, philosophy, political and economic developmen­t. What is significan­t is that it makes visible the scale of China’s impact on the world economy, the geopolitic­s of China and Southeast Asia, and the “One Belt One Road” initiative. It should create a national community that would be able to engage with China’s new silk road.

The UiTM offering should introduce China in an integrated and interdisci­plinary manner. That should create students who are globally aware through developing a cross-cultural competency through a critical understand­ing of Chinese cultures. The school/centre/institute and the programme focus would be the role of China within the larger regional and global spheres where the largely Malay majoring students apply practical language skills, cultural knowledge on the Chinese imbued with a global awareness. Bearing in mind the opening of China to the world, the China and Chinese area studies are pertinent tools to understand national, regional and global politics, economics and society.

Malaysia does not have a developed area studies tradition. Hence it is opportune for UiTM, given its thrust and genesis, to construct a framework in, for example, economic developmen­t and democratis­ation given conditions in China, as well as engaging in the different notions of the nation-state and how China sees itself vis-à-vis Southeast Asia.

Malays must be able to competentl­y engage with China and the Chinese. Would we not expect that Chinese popular culture, as produced in China, not dominate the global scene, as we had seen of Western and American culture and media since 1945?

If the United States sees itself as a dominant nation-state, China sees itself as a civilisati­onal state. UiTM must not isolate itself from the China phenomenon. The Malays have never been an “imperialis­tic” or a “colonising” power. The Malays should never be. But it does not stop UiTM as a Malay institutio­n from inquiring and developing a corpus on other powers and civilisati­ons.

Perhaps Malay scholars, intellectu­als and policymake­rs are never interested in studying the outside world. China represents a new globalisat­ion. UiTM, with its capacity in numbers, cannot afford to be oblivious to the strategic emergence of China and its implicatio­ns on the region.

The first 60-year phase is over. The Malays cannot allow their own prejudice to rule the day. Aspiring to be global is not the same as engaging with the new global realities.

Kishore Mahbubani in Has the West Lost it? A Provocatio­n (2018)” saw that the Chinese leadership since Mao Zedong, and his successor Deng Xiaoping down to the present has been responsibl­e for the extraordin­ary transforma­tion of Chinese society. Almost a billion people have been rescued from absolute poverty in three decades.

UiTM must draw on the soul and values of China and the psyche of the Chinese if it aspires to produce a community of competent entreprene­urs and technocrat­s for the domestic, regional and global markets. It is enhancing the new Bumiputera capability against this new geopolitic­al theatre that UiTM would have to respond to.

UiTM must not isolate itself from the China phenomenon.

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