Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- 1 Introduction – Malaysia's Future Is Redeemed
- Before Pakatan Harapan
- Before 9 May 2018
- With Mahathir at the Helm
- 31 One Thing Is Certain—There Will Be More Amendments to the Constitution
- 32 The More Things Change, the More Things May Actually Change
- 33 Did Merdeka Liberate or Create Malaya?
- 34 Interview with Nurul Izzah Anwar: Rebuilding a Nation Long Divided
- 35 The Diminishing of Humans Through Identity Politics
- 36 The Art of Dismantling Cultural Pluralism
- 37 No Need to Let Bigots Dictate Policy
- 38 What the Penang Floods Say About Malaysian Politics (and It's Not Just About Climate Change)
- 39 This is the Moment of Truth for Malaysia's Race-based Politics
- 40 We are Equal Only Through Our Vote
- 41 Why the Opposition Has a Shot at Toppling the Barisan Nasional with Mahathir at the Helm
- 42 Spiralling Back towards Reformasi
- 43 Individual Freedom Is a Matter of National Survival
- 44 Why Meet the Twenty-first Century with Twentieth Century Mindsets?
- 45 A Final Quarrel between a Repentant Grandfather and Oldfashioned Self-absorbed Parents
- 46 Outraged Enough to Go Vote or Cynical Enough to Stay Home?
- Beyond 9 May 2018
- About the Author
34 - Interview with Nurul Izzah Anwar: Rebuilding a Nation Long Divided
from With Mahathir at the Helm
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 February 2019
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- 1 Introduction – Malaysia's Future Is Redeemed
- Before Pakatan Harapan
- Before 9 May 2018
- With Mahathir at the Helm
- 31 One Thing Is Certain—There Will Be More Amendments to the Constitution
- 32 The More Things Change, the More Things May Actually Change
- 33 Did Merdeka Liberate or Create Malaya?
- 34 Interview with Nurul Izzah Anwar: Rebuilding a Nation Long Divided
- 35 The Diminishing of Humans Through Identity Politics
- 36 The Art of Dismantling Cultural Pluralism
- 37 No Need to Let Bigots Dictate Policy
- 38 What the Penang Floods Say About Malaysian Politics (and It's Not Just About Climate Change)
- 39 This is the Moment of Truth for Malaysia's Race-based Politics
- 40 We are Equal Only Through Our Vote
- 41 Why the Opposition Has a Shot at Toppling the Barisan Nasional with Mahathir at the Helm
- 42 Spiralling Back towards Reformasi
- 43 Individual Freedom Is a Matter of National Survival
- 44 Why Meet the Twenty-first Century with Twentieth Century Mindsets?
- 45 A Final Quarrel between a Repentant Grandfather and Oldfashioned Self-absorbed Parents
- 46 Outraged Enough to Go Vote or Cynical Enough to Stay Home?
- Beyond 9 May 2018
- About the Author
Summary
Nurul Izzah, Daughter of the Reformasi, and of the jailed opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, was pulled into politics as a young girl. Now 36 years old, she has become a major figure in Malaysian politics. The future looks bright for her and many see her as a future prime minister. Sometimes called a giant killer for her electoral successes, she had had to suffer much over the last two decades.
She and her mother Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, chairman of Pakatan Harapan, visited Penang Institute on 29 July 2017 to attend its event, ‘Symposium Pemikiran Anwar Ibrahim: Penampilan Demokrat Muslim’. Penang Monthly took the chance to chat with both of them.
Ooi Kee Beng: Thank you for taking the time to meet me. Should I call you Nurul or Izzah?
Nurul Izzah Anwar: Izzah. We are five girls and one boy, and all the girls have ‘Nurul’ in their name. Nurul just means ‘Light of’ in Arabic, so you need another name to go with it. [Izzah means Might or Power].
OKB: The last time we met was at a lunch following a talk in December last year at the Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore. The Pakatan coalition at that time was not in good shape, I remember. Today as we meet, the picture looks very different. After July 14 this year, Pakatan Harapan looks promising after the parties managed to agree on the coalition's power structure. Do you feel it is more hopeful than Pakatan Rakyat was?
NIA: These are in different contexts and it would be flawed if we equate these developments to be one and the same. In 2008 the opposition obtained an agreement for one-to-one fights across the board and Pakatan Rakyat came into being only after the results proved impressive. And then there was agreement on a policy framework that bound everyone together. Pakatan Harapan (PH) came about after a split in PR. There was a trust deficit and a degree of cynicism had permeated the scene. Therefore there was greater urgency to galvanise ourselves especially since Anwar Ibrahim, the leader of the opposition, had been imprisoned. Every opposition per se would face problems of cohesion; we are not exempted from that.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- CatharsisA Second Chance for Democracy in Malaysia, pp. 122 - 132Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2018