THERE are names we remember because they shouted the loudest.
And then there are those we should remember because they built the loudest dreams — quietly.
Tan Sri Vic M. Hutson was one of those rare Malaysians. A man whose idea of progress wasn’t steel or skyscrapers, but a tiger’s roar echoing through the Ulu Klang hills. The man who gave Malaysia its national zoo — and in doing so, gave us something even greater: a reason to care.
A Zoo Born from Vision, Not Wealth
In the 1950s, when our young nation was still learning what it meant to stand on its own feet, Vic Hutson stood on five acres of land in Bangsar and decided to build something that made no commercial sense — a place for animals, for wonder, for learning.
He started with a tiger named Nikky, three orangutans, and a handful of crocodiles. No big grants. No government plan. Just conviction.
From that private menagerie came an idea that grew into the Malayan Zoological Society — and eventually, Zoo Negara. By 1963, it opened its gates to the public, and a generation of children would come to know what the wild truly looked like. Hutson didn’t just build cages; he built connection.

A Citizen’s Dream That Became a National Institution
What made Hutson extraordinary wasn’t only that he dreamed of a zoo. It was that he made it happen through community.
He believed that national pride wasn’t something handed down by ministries — it was something citizens built together. He gathered volunteers, scientists, civil servants, and ordinary Malaysians who simply wanted their children to see a Malayan tiger up close, not just in a book.
That belief — that civic imagination could create something lasting — is what turned a backyard zoo into Zoo Negara. And that’s a lesson we keep forgetting in our chase for quick wins and grand launches: great nations are built not by headlines, but by human hands.
The Courage to Protect, Not Just Create
Starting a zoo was the easy part. Keeping it alive was the hard one.
As Kuala Lumpur expanded, the land that once held jungle and streams became prime real estate. Developers saw opportunity. Hutson saw legacy.
He and his Society fought to preserve the zoo’s grounds — not out of stubbornness, but out of principle. Because some spaces must remain sacred to memory and meaning. Because every nation needs places where children can meet the living symbols of its own forests.
It wasn’t glamorous work — it was meetings, plans, letters, setbacks. But it mattered. And because he fought, the zoo still stands today.

The Quiet Builder We Forgot
Malaysia has a habit of celebrating the loud and forgetting the loyal. But it is people like Vic Hutson who built the foundations we now walk on.
He didn’t need statues or streets named after him. His monument roams on four legs, swings from branches, and flies across the sky at Zoo Negara. His reward was seeing a child smile at an elephant or stand in awe before a lion.
And maybe that’s the kind of nation-building we need to rediscover — one measured not by profit, but by purpose, not by applause, but by endurance.
A Call to Remember
Today, as we debate policy and progress, let’s pause to remember what true vision looks like. It looks like a man with a few acres and an idea that refused to die.
Vic Hutson didn’t just give us a zoo.
He gave us a reminder — that care is a national value. That compassion is infrastructure. That a nation that cannot protect its animals will one day forget how to protect its people.
So yes, we should remember him. Because in a world where too many chase recognition, he chased meaning. And left behind something timeless.
Datuk Dr Vinod Sekhar is the publisher of the Vibes and Chairman of the Petra Group