Opinion

Tun Dr Ismail: Another forgotten nation builder – Tawfik Ismail 

His son is asking not for rewards but remembrance

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 24 Nov 2021 9:00AM

Tun Dr Ismail: Another forgotten nation builder – Tawfik Ismail 
Eldest son of the late Malaysia’s second deputy prime minister Tun Dr Ismail Abdul Rahman (pic) says his father did not ask for either reward or recognition for the work he voluntarily and willingly gave his life for. – Wikipedia pic, November 24, 2021

I WAS asked to comment on Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s request for a RM100 million property. 

This is my response:

Life is unfair. When Tunku Abdul Rahman retired, Kenny Hills was renamed Bukit Tunku, and Tunku was given a house at the foot of Bukit Tunku. When Tun Abdul Razak passed away, his widow and family were given a house in Jalan Eaton just off Circular Road that was renamed Jalan Tun Razak. 

When my father died, he died as acting prime minister in a house he owned, but my mother had to surrender the government car and received nothing from the Tun Razak government except for a pension my father was entitled to.

Tun Dr Ismail Abdul Rahman (second from right) pictured with (from left) Tun V. T. Sambanthan, Tun Abdul Razak Hussein, Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra al-Haj, Tun H. S. Lee and Tun Omar Ong (right). – Tawfik Ismail Facebook pic, November 24, 2021
Tun Dr Ismail Abdul Rahman (second from right) pictured with (from left) Tun V. T. Sambanthan, Tun Abdul Razak Hussein, Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra al-Haj, Tun H. S. Lee and Tun Omar Ong (right). – Tawfik Ismail Facebook pic, November 24, 2021

Several government properties were named after my father but some have been taken away during Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s premiership, like the Tun Ismail Atomic Research Centre (Pusat Penyelidikan Atom Tun Dr Ismail or Puspati), and a memorial budgeted for and supposedly to be implemented by the National Archives has yet to take off.

Many Malaysians, as a result, have largely forgotten Tun Dr Ismail and the ideals he fought and lived for.

Would it be proper for me as his eldest son to ask for fairness from the government to an entitlement now as passed by Parliament? 

If Najib can request property worth RM100 million, what is my late father’s worth at 1973 values but at today’s prices? 

If the children of past prime ministers can inherit lucrative properties gifted to their fathers or the widows of ex-prime ministers, should I and my siblings be deprived?

What can subsequent governments since Tun Razak’s premiership point to that was given to my family, even as a token of the nation’s gratitude?

Can I at least ask for seed capital or an asset I could monetise to set up a fund for scholarships in my father’s name, The Tun Dr Ismail Scholarship, which incidentally was Maybank’s proposed tribute to him as ex-chairman of Malayan Banking, but which never took off?

My conclusion: 

My late father asked for no reward or recognition for the work he voluntarily and willingly gave his life for, for the nation he loved, and it would not be proper for me to burden the nation with any guilt or regret at not giving material wealth as reward. 

But I do ask that his vision and ideals for the nation as recorded in his hansard speeches and his policy pronouncements be enshrined and imparted as education at schools and universities so we can be a better nation. – The Vibes, November 24, 2021

Writer is eldest son of Tun Dr Ismail Abdul Rahman, Malaysia’s second deputy prime minister from 1970 to his death on August 20, 1973

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