GABUNGAN Pembela Ummah (Ummah) chairman Ismail Mina Ahmad said his comments that non-Malays did not fight the communists was in reference to a specific episode a few weeks after the Japanese surrendered in World War 2 when the Bintang Tiga group went on a revenge killing spree.
The 69-year-old ulama said his speech at “The rise of the ummah” convention over the weekend was taken out of context.
Ismail has been on the receiving end of statements by retired armed forces’ groups which said the remarks are a distortion of history.
The head of the umbrella body for some 300 Muslim civil society organisations said he never once made any reference to communists.
“What I was talking about was an event in a specific time frame within two to three weeks after the Japanese were defeated. Bintang Tiga went on terror spree and killed many Malays. At the time, they had gained control of some districts,” he told The Malaysian Insight.
He denied saying that it was only the Malays who had fought against Bintang Tiga.
But with regard to its killing spree, Ismail said the facts and documents he read showed that no other races fought alongside the Malays after Bintang Tiga targeted Malayans suspected of being Japanese collaborators, or spies.
Bintang Tiga was separate from the Malayan Communist Party (MCP) and was another name for the Malayan People’s Anti-Japanese Army (MPAJA), a resistance group encouraged by the British and the MCP to fight the Japanese in the early 1940s.
After the Japanese surrendered and before the British returned in 1945, MPAJA hunted down those they believed had worked with the Japanese.
Historians writing about that period have said these collaborators were often Malays who were employed by the Japanese as policemen.
Ismail, who has set up a tahfiz school in Kedah, said he is ready to be investigated for making an allegedly seditious statement.
The Muslim activist, who was a student leader in his university years when he studied anthropology and sociology at Universiti Malaya, declined to respond to the statement made by the National Patriots’ Association president, brig-gen (rtd) Mohamed Arshad Raji, who blamed him for distorting history and instilling hatred among the races.
“He was referring to something that I did not say and he (was commenting based on) secondary information. He should have referred to my text before attacking me. I did my research and fact-checked before I spoke that day. I hoped he would have done the same,” said Ismail.
Arshad had also said Putrajaya must set the record straight about non-Malays who fought for the country and not let Muslim groups get away with distorting history. – January 17, 2018.
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