By Amarjeet Singh @ AJ
On 31 August 1957, people in the peninsula – the ethnic Malays, Chinese, Indians, Sikhs, Serani, Eurasians and those from the Portuguese settlement in Malacca – from fishermen to farmers, from royalty to rickshaw pullers — stood together and declared Merdeka (independence).
We were poor, but we were proud. We had nothing, but we had each other. We believed in this country as if it were our own flesh and blood – because it was.
Then came the trials that would test us.
Forged by fire
We fought the Communist insurgency. Our sons and daughters in uniform bled to keep our borders safe.
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We defended our frontiers during the Confrontation, when Malaysian soldiers faced death so the flag could still fly.
We endured the May 13 riots in 1969, a wound that could have broken us – but somehow, we stitched ourselves back together.
We built roads, railways, ports and townships – not by one race, but by all. Labourers from India and China dug the mines and laid the tracks. Malay ‘uncles’ and ‘aunties’ toiled in the fields, markets and offices. We sweated, side by side, for a Malaysia that belonged to all.
We ate together – not ‘Malay food’ or ‘Chinese food’ or ‘Indian food’, but Malaysian food. Nasi lemak. Rojak. Cendol. ABC. During the ‘emergency’, we shared ubi kayu (tapioca), rice or just bread when that was all there was.

When fire, flood or war struck, we didn’t ask about race, religion or colour. We asked, “How can I help?” We saw only the human side. We saw the red of blood that our flag stands for – blood shed for Malaysia, by the people of Malaysia.
We didn’t just survive; we thrived.
Heroes who united us
Legends like P Ramlee made us laugh, cry and dream together.
Our sportsmen and women became our pride and our glue: Mokhtar Dahari, Soh Chin Aun, Santokh Singh, R Arumugam – a golden football team that made the nation roar as one. Our badminton giants who carried Malaysia onto the world stage. Our hockey warriors who made us feared and respected internationally. When they won, the whole country poured into the streets. We hugged strangers. We sang until our throats gave out.
And when Sudirman sang Saya Anak Malaysia, it wasn’t a song – it was our heartbeat.
During Hari Raya, the Lunar New Year, Gawai, Kaamatan, Deepavali, Christmas and Vaisakhi, we went to each other’s homes, joked, laughed and ate as one big Malaysian family. That was Malaysia.
Where we lost our way
But where did we go wrong?
Today, we have been corrupted by money. We have been poisoned by past ministers who ruled by dividing us. We have leaders who hide behind race and religion to cling to power. We have some people who let hate and suspicion be louder than friendship and trust.
We see shallow unity – symbols without substance. We see weaponised hypersensitivity – turning small mistakes into national crises. We see corruption draped in patriotism – where several of the same people who wave the Jalur Gemilang (Malaysian flag) rob the country blind. We see cowardly leadership – fearing the loss of votes more than the loss of Malaysia’s soul.
The path forward
So how do we change Malaysia?
We remember who we were. We speak up for each other, not just our ethnic group or faith. We demand leaders with courage and integrity, not just charisma and slogans. We teach our children that Merdeka is not about flags or parades – it’s about standing together when it’s hardest to do so.
Because a flag is just cloth until the people behind it are one. And if we forget that… no enemy will need to conquer us. We will have done it ourselves.
Amarjeet Singh @ AJ is a seasoned marketing, public relations and business review consultant.
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So very true.
Alas, these days; politicians of the day uses the racial card to divide us! Introducing policies that divides the citizens of this country! The double standards!
So sickening and sad!
History explained well but then who if any among current leaders professionals elites will learn and adjust to bring back the Malaysian spirit and life instead of self serving decisive policies designed and practiced more for personal greed and interests instead of one Malaysia.
UNITY IS STRENGTH is a NATIONAL LOGO which may be perceived to have become of COSMETIC VALUE like the OATHS when taking Office or CODES OF ETHICS or MISSION STATEMENTS by Organisations.
Bless all
May 13th was an important faultline… From that point divisive politics became the agenda of those entrusted with national leadership.
Peninsula Malaya was mismanaged as two countries via budgets, absurd university, civil service and armed forces quotas.
Our best and brightest were denied for three generations already. The promised removal of this national distortion was betrayed. Go figure.
Mani Jegathesan should also be mentioned as one of our great sportsmen.