Malaysia Day: The soul of a nation lies in Borneo

LocalOpinion
16 Sep 2025 • 11:20 AM MYT
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Malaysia Day: The soul of a nation lies in Borneo

MALAYSIA Day is not just a date. It is the day we chose to believe in something greater than ourselves: the idea of Malaysia. On September 16, 1963, Malaya, Sabah, and Sarawak entered a partnership—not a hierarchy—to create a nation built on diversity, equality, and shared destiny.

Yet if we are honest, we have strayed from that promise. Malaya has too often behaved as though Malaysia is its gift to bestow, rather than a covenant to honour. Sabah and Sarawak have too often been reduced to suppliers of resources and numbers, their rights overlooked, their voices sidelined. And yet, despite this neglect, they have remained loyal to the Malaysian project.

This loyalty is not born of naivety. It is born of conviction. For in Sabah and Sarawak, the Malaysian soul is alive and as of now, untarnished. Communities live together without suspicion. Differences are not weaponised, they are celebrated. Faith and culture are not political tools; they are part of daily life. The Malaysian idea thrives most naturally where it has been least respected.

That is the paradox, and perhaps the salvation, of our country.

For too long, the danger to Malaysia has come not from without but from within—when Malaya forgets that it is not Malaysia. When entitlement replaces humility. When power is hoarded instead of shared. If we are to truly save this nation—and continue the reforms and rescue of our nation that Anwar Ibrahim has begun—then we must acknowledge a hard truth: leadership need not, and should not, always come from the Peninsula.

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The founding agreement was one of equality. Sabah and Sarawak were never meant to be appendages; they were equal partners. To accept this in words but deny it in practice is hypocrisy. To correct it in practice today is justice.

And perhaps the clearest, most powerful act of justice we can make is this: to embrace the possibility, and the inevitability, that Malaysia’s next Prime Minister could be a son or daughter of Borneo. That would ensure the continuity to the strengthening and unifying of the Malaysian backbone - her diverse peoples.

Not as symbolism. Not as charity. But because Sabah and Sarawak have kept the Malaysian flame alive when others nearly extinguished it. Because they have shown us what coexistence looks like when politics does not corrupt the human spirit. Because the future of Malaysia will depend not on where its leader comes from, but on whether that leader carries within them the values of unity, resilience, and fairness.

Let us be prepared to entrust its guardianship to those who have never abandoned it. If we are serious about building the nation we all dream of, then perhaps the next chapter of Malaysia’s story must be written from Borneo.

Malaysia is not just Malaya. It never was. It never should be.

One day Malaysia will be the lighthouse for the world. The shining bright house on the hill that will inspire and give hope in a world seemingly slowly going mad.

We are singularly plural. We are Malaysia.

God bless us all and Happy Malaysia Day.

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