Origin: 1635–45; < Latin: foster son, pupil,equivalent to al- (stem of alere to feed,support) + -u- (< stem-vowel *-o- in interiorsyllable) + -m ( i ) nus, orig. passiveparticipial suffix (cf. adult, old), akin to Greek-menos; see phenomenon
^ Etymology of alumni. To support & feed. Maybe an alumnus exists in the corridors if Taylor's College Sri Hartamas, but not an alumni just yet. Hope I'm wrong.
Me thinks the debating scene might be a good place to start my adventure on learning about culture & community. It's a scene densely populated by some of Malaysia's century-long established institutions eg. MCKK, TKC, SDAR, UT MARA, UiTM and the likes. (not sure if all are at least a century old)
Here's are some examples to show they're doing things right.
Just the other day, Dato' Saifuddin Abdullah, presumably Malaysia's 'Father of Debate' tweeted below
Fiat Sapienta Virtus.
I had wondered what it meant. Turns out it means 'Manliness Through Wisdom'. Interesting that he still remembers his alma mater's motto despite having left the school 35 years ago. Even more interesting that he still practices it until now. Post- GE13 and many have praised Dato' Saifuddin for being a true gentleman about his lost in vying for Temerloh's MP position.
Naturally, the next person I'm about to mention is also from the debating scene. His name is Syed Saddiq. I met him on FB when I asked him about Dato Saifuddin's contributions to the debating scene (a whole bucketlist, btw. I dare say he created a legacy).
So fast forward our conversation, Saddiq mentioned he was from a military school where nationalism was deeply embedded in their school culture. It sounded quite alien to me at first- culture-nationalism. Coming from SK TTDI and SMK BUD (4), all I could ever remember was this collective yet selfish rush to obtain straight A+'s, get a scholarship and run away from a glass ceiling. A glass ceiling that allowed us to dream big enough but yet taunted us for what we supposedly could not achieve.
Primary, secondary and even tertiary education...I still remember the first lesson during Malaysian Studies last year.
Mr. William asked,
"How many of you are willing to die for your country?
Only 2 or 3 raised their hands out of a whopping 100+ students. I was one of them. (Another was Amalina Taib, my now super close college friend who unsurprisingly went to a smart school in Putrajaya).
This occasion reflected the opening ceremony of HELPMUN 2010 (I was 16) where MP Tony Phua asked an audience of 200+ a similar question
"How many of you plan to leave,know someone who does or have been asked by your parents to leave Malaysia?"
At least 90% raised their hands. I was one of them. The sense of abandonment of community,a subset of society 3 years ago was very real. And still is now. Thankfully though, although Saddiq and I clearly come opposite ends of the spectrum, I am slowly but surely gravitating towards his, towards ours.
Here's to a new journey of learning about community, culture and comradeship.
And building it from down up.
Happy Days Ahead,
Hui Min
PS- this post was completely done on my phone on impulse. And I'm super duper sleepy. Hence,sorry the disorganized points and uncreative structure. I will probably revisit this piece again.


Ahaha, that comment about his alma matter... My dad still has it as his back window sticker... And sometimes even wears the tie on Wednesday (At least I think it's wednesday)
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