Opinion

In a fractured world, Malaysia must remember who we are

In a time when identity is increasingly weaponised, Malaysia remains one of the few places where identity can still be shared.

Updated 3 months ago · Published on 31 Mar 2026 11:23AM

In a fractured world, Malaysia must remember who we are
We are today arguably one of the most stable economies and governments around. - March 31, 2026

by Vinod Sekhar

IN a world that seems increasingly defined by conflict, grief, and an unrelenting tide of noise, it is easy to lose sight of what still stands—quietly, resolutely—as a force for balance and humanity.

Today, as war once again casts a long shadow across the Middle East and tensions ripple through regions far beyond it, we are reminded that instability is no longer distant. It is immediate. It is constant. And it is shaping the way nations see each other—and themselves.

Amidst all of this, Malaysia must pause and reflect. We are today arguably one of the most stable economies and governments around.

Last November, when Kuala Lumpur hosted the ASEAN leaders, I wrote about something we often overlook: that Malaysia is not just another country navigating global uncertainty—we are, in many ways, an example of what the world is struggling to become.

Not perfect. Not without our own noise, divisions, and challenges. But still—remarkably—holding.

We are a nation where diversity is not an aspiration, but a lived reality. Where different faiths, cultures, and histories do not merely coexist, but intersect daily in ways that most of the world still finds difficult to comprehend.

In a time when identity is increasingly weaponised, Malaysia remains one of the few places where identity can still be shared.

And that matters more today than it did even a few months ago.

Because what we are witnessing globally is not just war—it is the erosion of understanding. The breakdown of empathy. The dangerous simplicity of “us versus them.”

Malaysia cannot afford to fall into that trap

We have our disagreements. Our political noise. Our moments of frustration with one another. But these are not signs of failure—they are signs of a society still negotiating, still engaging, still believing that coexistence is worth the effort.

The real failure would be to forget what we already have.

The real danger would be to allow external conflicts and internal noise to harden us—to make us cynical, divided, or indifferent.

Because Malaysia’s true strength has never been in its resources or its economy alone. It lies in something far less tangible, but far more powerful: our ability to accept, to adapt, and to live together without losing ourselves.

That is not a weakness. That is wisdom.

In a fractured world, nations that can hold complexity without breaking are rare. Malaysia is one of them.

But only if we choose to be.

So, this is not just a reminder. It is a call.

A call to rise above the noise—both from within and beyond our borders. A call to reject the easy narratives of division. A call to remember that what we represent is bigger than our daily frustrations.

We are not bystanders in this moment of history.

We are, whether we realise it or not, a quiet counterpoint to the chaos.

And perhaps now more than ever, the world needs countries like Malaysia to not just exist—but to lead by example.

Not loudly. Not forcefully.

But by simply continuing to show that coexistence, respect, and shared humanity are not idealistic concepts.

They are possible.

And they are already here.

We don't need to own the table.

We don't need to lead the table.

But we do and must continue to hold the table. – March 31, 2026

Datuk Dr Vinod Sekhar is the publisher of The Vibes and Chairman of the Petra Group

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