MALAYSIA is one of the few nations on earth where you can hear three to five languages in a single conversation, where a single street carries the scents of twenty cuisines, where the names on our shopfronts tell the story of humanity’s long journey across continents.
Nowhere else is the world so beautifully condensed into one land.
And yet … despite this extraordinary gift, we have allowed the most cynical among us to poison it.
We are multicultural, multiracial, multilingual - vibrant, colourful, textured. But instead of using that as the strength it so clearly is, we allow small men with loud voices and hungry ambitions to turn it into a weapon.
We let political expediency shrink a great civilisation into petty insecurity. We allow disingenuous - and too often illiterate -academics to rewrite our history, fabricate new narratives, erase contributions, and demean sacrifices simply to justify their own narrow agendas.
It is a tragedy of a nation blessed with abundance … choosing to behave as if it were impoverished.
And then, by stark contrast, we look across the causeway. Singapore - far less diverse, far smaller, far younger - celebrates every sliver of culture it can find.
Where we hesitate, they embrace. Where we quarrel, they codify. And so, suddenly, Ipoh chicken rice becomes Singapore chicken rice.
Our noodles become Singapore noodles. Our laksa, our chicken chop, our culinary soul - repackaged and resold to the world with a confidence that should have been ours in the first place.


We lost not because they stole, but because we surrendered.
We surrendered our pride, our courage, our ownership of our own story. And here is the uncomfortable truth:
Sarawak and Sabah understand this.
They carry their identity with dignity.
They celebrate difference as nature intended - fearlessly, harmoniously, proudly.
Meanwhile, over in Malaya, the peninsula behaves like the insecure sibling - timid, anxious, and easily manipulated. A land that once led is now too easily distracted by provocations designed by people who do not love Malaysia but only love the power they gain from dividing it.
This must end
Malaysia cannot, must not, be held hostage by individuals and organisations whose only business model is fear. Who foment hate because hate is profitable.
Who thrive on suspicion because suspicion is easier to weaponise than knowledge. Who have no interest in the Malaysian soul except to carve pieces from it to stay relevant.
It is time - past time - for Malaysians to push back. To push back hard.
To reject the politics of division in every election, at every level, regardless of party or colour or flag. Vote against those who divide us - because they are the single greatest threat to our future.
We are no longer a nation waiting to be something. We are something. We are the acknowledged leaders of ASEAN. We are a nation whose diversity is not a flaw, but a superpower - if only we choose to embrace it.
And today, for the first time in a long time, we have a Prime Minister who does not fear Malaysia’s diversity, but celebrates it. Who sees our differences not as fault lines but as foundations - our strength, our richness, our competitive advantage in a world hungry for exactly what we naturally are.
But it is not enough for him to carry this alone.
Those around him - and those who want to replace him - must hear a message more powerful than any political slogan:
The silent majority is not silent anymore.
And we are the majority.
This is our Malaysia.
Our identity.
Our story.
Our soul.
And it is time - finally time - for us to protect it.
Not with anger.
Not with hate.
But with pride, clarity, and truth.
Because Malaysia’s destiny will never be written by the dividers. It will be written by those who believe in her. And we, the majority, do. – November 30, 2025
Datuk Dr Vinod Sekhar is the publisher of the Vibes and Chairman of the Petra Group