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Jakarta Post

Sabahan first, then a Malaysian

I am a Sabahan first, then a Malaysian

Philip Golingai (The Jakarta Post)
Petaling Jaya, Malaysia
Sun, May 10, 2015 Published on May. 10, 2015 Published on 2015-05-10T18:31:03+07:00

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Sabahan first, then a Malaysian

I am a Sabahan first, then a Malaysian.

I'€™ve lived in Klang Valley longer than in Kota Kinabalu, but I don'€™t consider myself as a Selangorian or a KLite.

You can take me out of Sabah but you can'€™t take Sabah out of me. I'€™m not sure why. Is it the ngiu chap (beef noodle) I ate when growing up in Kota Kinabalu?

Is it because 90 per cent of my relatives live in Penampang (a Kada­zandusun-dominated district near Kota Kinabalu)?

I don'€™t even know the lyrics of the Selangor state anthem even though I'€™ve lived in Klang Valley for more than two decades. I know by heart Sabah Tanah Airku, the anthem of my homeland.

I'€™ll get excited when El Hadji Diouf, the Senegal footballer, plays for Sabah. However, I wouldn'€™t if Selangor were to sign him.

I don'€™t even vote in Subang Jaya where I live and where my kid goes to school. I vote in Penampang.

I do love living in Klang Valley as it is more developed '€“ the aisle of the supermarkets here is wider than those in Sabah and they have better steak selection '€“ whereas Sabah can be like a third world country with its frequent '€œearth hour'€ (euphemism for blackout), schools without walls and gravel road '€œhighways'€.

However, I see Klang Valley as a place where I work and Sabah as the place I will eventually return to when I retire.

Actually, what I am first depends on where I am. If I'€™m outside of Malaysia, I will be Malaysian first, then Sabahan.

What is a Malaysian? When I was packing my bags to study in Kalamazoo, Michigan, the United States in the early 1990s, I included items such as Lat cartoons, Sheila Majid and Headwind CDs, and photographs of iconic Malaysian sites. (I had to pack these items as when I studied overseas, it was before the age of Google.)

For me, these items defined me as a Malaysian. If Americans asked me what was Malaysia, I would let them read Lat cartoon books, listen to Sheila Majid and Headwind, and show a photograph of Mount Kinabalu.

Who I am (Kadazandusun, Sabahan, journalist, Golingai, Catholic or heterosexual) also depends on who I'€™m with.

For example, just say that I'€™m discussing the 16-year-old conversion case of a Christian in Kinarut, Sabah, on WhatsApp with Christians, I would be giving a perspective that might be different if there was a non-Christian in the group.

Depending on who is in the group, I might change my perspective that you might think I'€™m a hypocrite, schizophrenic or a politician.

Malaysia is a melting pot (a place where different ethnicities are melted together) and salad bowl (cultures juxtaposed '€“ like salad ingredients '€“ but do not merge into a single homogeneous culture).

Through my interaction with other ethnic groups in Malaysia such as Melanau, Murut and Malay, I absorb a little of their culture but my Kadazandusun culture remains.

I'€™m Kadazandusun first, then Malaysian. That'€™s what makes me typically Malaysian. (***)

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