Thursday, September 07, 2006

Racism Works Both Ways - A Mat Salleh Story

We live in a funny country, Malaysia. The British may have left long ago, but they seem to have left an indelible mark on the collective Malaysian psyche of Ketuanan Orang Putih (White Supremacy, loosely translated). Thus the very sight of a person of Caucasian origin evokes a funny response in most Malaysians, depending on their personal point of view. Some of them, deeply anti-Israel and anti-West, extend their hatred of all white people to these innocent travelers, covering them in a blanket generalisation, though thankfully not to the extent of the murderous Amsterdam residents seen in Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo. Some of them simply haven't been alive long enough (or not attentive enough to the existence of races and cultures outside their own, as seems to be the case more and more nowadays) to formulate an opinion about these strangely coloured beings sniffing about their tourist shops, and are content to simply sit and stare. But by far the most popular response, or so I have seen, is to adopt a strangely deeply-rooted belief that white people are superior to them (at the very least financially, which is also, sadly, often true), immediately switch to the best British/American accent they can put on (the efficacy of which varies on how many hours of TV they've watched recently), and invariably put on a big smile the likes of which ordinary customers can only dream of seeing.

Studying in England, I of course see white people all the time. But rarely have I had the pleasure of walking WITH one in the streets of my beloved Malaysia. It's definitely far more entertaining that walking with them in England, and sometimes even profitable, as I recently discovered.

The following story takes place in Kinta City Shopping Centre, Ipoh. A friend of a friend from New Zealand called Auana Hobson was down for a week, and Anand and I, being good friends and fiercely insistent that our hometown of Ipoh is every bit as interesting and exciting a KL (albeit without the parang-happy addicts around every corner), we decided to take her around the city. I got my first heads-up that this would be an interesting trip when we walked into the local mamak restaurant. Immediately the South Asian tablehands sitting around jumped to their feet and mobilised into an army of well-trained immaculately groomed five-star-restaurant-quality waiters. A manager, dressed in suitably better clothing than his scruffier underlings, materialised at our table and personally took our orders, despite having a battalion of Jeeveses standing by to do it for him. What a great guy. They couldn't serve the food quickly enough, either, as Auana's maggi goreng was practically teleported straight from the wok to the table in a blur of mamaks and rapid-fire Tamil. (Ours arrived only slightly later. Anand, having bleached hair and numerous, uh, fashion accessories pinned to his face, could easily pass for a British-born Indian, and I by sheer coincidence was wearing a Borneo t-shirt. Very touristy, I was told.)

Then we decided to cross the road and enter Kinta City. It was 10pm and everything was about to close, when I decided I wanted this book from Popular Bookstore. So in we walk, with the lights dimmed, one last customer at the till, and the entire store's worth of salesgirls emptying the cash registers, and everyone looks up. Then they freeze. (Had you been standing in the room, you'd swear you could HEAR, as I did, the voices in their heads go "Aiya! Ang moh la!") then BOOM. With speed any Japanese salesman would envy, they all snapped to attention, all wide smiles, and we get our own personal chaperone. The manager materialises (they must teach them that at manager school) and jabbers in rapid-fire Cantonese at the unfortunate salesgirl who happens to be closest to the cash register when I put the book on the counter. She picks it up, takes one look at it and immediately, for no apparent reason, offers me a 20% discount. Now here I look around for the catch, cos I don't have a membership card, nor am I gonna buy anything else, but I don't see anything, and I'm no idiot (at least not most of the time), so I say yes please. She bags it, and I turn around to walk out of the store only to find my own mini-guard-of-honour standing at attention near the exit. The girls bow and chorus a well-rehearsed "Thank you, come again" as we walk out of the store, me trying to hide my bewilderment behind a nonchalant-affluent-Westerner expression.

20% discount just for being with a foreigner! You'd expect a price hike, not a discount, but hey, whatever makes them happy. Me? I'm going to start a homestay program for Western tourists. Free board and lodging, in return for accompanying me to do my shopping. Who'd guess racism had its upside as well?

6 comments:

hazwan said...

to ensure financial longevity, it would be wise to bleach one's skin. MJ had the right idea!

Anonymous said...

RANDOM!
MJ's a very gay jolly weird gentleman. Did i say "gay", umm yeah its like happy gay not gay kinda gay... no offense hazwan. uhh, nevermind. Anyhow, dear TAM i saw your comment from the Trump's Blog ive subscribed. And yeah its like i happen to be Malaysian, dude. I'm living in PJ, Sel. Know where that is or not ar? lol.... Peace out dude.

Anonymous said...

wah.. who dunno where is pj ah.

anyway, racism is good for the economy. from the plastic surgeons point of view. white power! :P

just kidding. just like you, im black too.

Anonymous said...

no aaron's not black.he's BROWN.
and he's gonna get his brown ass kicked.

Anonymous said...

ok.. he's a brown ass.

but he'll be black after the aaron singh barbecue..

Anonymous said...

Hey there stranger!!!Well i never thought you would actually write that little story!!!!!Thats wot happens when you have an exotic white New Zealander, with a wonderful name like Auana....lol