©The
Star (Used by permission)
by Shaila Koshy
KUALA LUMPUR: At first glance, Tijah Yok Chopli strikes one as a petite
and demure orang asli.
But when she speaks, you are caught in a powerhouse of energy, honesty and
passion.
The young teacher from Bidor was just one of more than 100 panellists at the
recent 14th Malaysian Law Conference, but this non-lawyer brought home
powerfully the importance of the Federal Constitution and of constitutionalism
for marginalised peoples.
“I think the colonials thought of this place as Tanah Melayu because they went
to the estuaries or the edges of the jungles where they met Malays only,” she
said.
Speaking in Bahasa Malaysia on “Orang Asli and our Constitution – Protecting
Indigenous' Customs and Cultural Rights”, Tijah showed that the Constitution had
fallen short in fulfilling its purpose.
Tijah, who is a Senoi, confessed that when she was given the topic to talk on,
she had no idea what the Constitution was apart from a vague memory of the
reference in the Rukunegara to its supremacy.
However, she set herself the task of reading it and was surprised by what it
contained.
Tijah said the orang asli may not know about the Constitution but they lived by
their own constitution and laws.
“We have our own groups and districts and zones and make decisions by consensus.
We build on the policy of sharing and living in harmony with each other and with
nature.
“Our lives are stress-free, unlike urban life which is wreaked with rape here
and there, kidnapping here and there, and house break-ins here and there.
“I can pull my collar up with pride,” she said, and did just that.
Unlike many who left Malaysia during the 1997 economic crisis, Tijah said the
orang asli stayed put: “Whether the economy is good or bad, we are poor.”
“We are not anti-development. I too want money, to be rich, to have a car, to
have development but not to the extent that we lose our customs and values,” she
said.
Fellow panellist Centre for Orang Asli Concerns coordinator Dr Colin Nicholas
said the orang asli were not just attached to a plot of land but a particular
geographical space.
“It is the basis of their spirituality and the source of their identity. They
want their land on their terms,” he said, adding that the orang asli had been
clearly left out when the Constitution was drafted.
Universiti Malaya Faculty of Law deputy dean (research and development) Dr Ramy
Bulan said the preservation of indigenous peoples languages was important.
“Without language, dances and ceremonies are debased to mere entertainment,” she
said.