COMMENT Is Anwar Ibrahim's intimation he
may retire from the exertions of leading the opposition in Malaysia
should it fail to obtain a mandate at the general election a
sympathy-winning ploy to galvanise support or frank admission that
though his spirit may be willing the flesh is increasingly wan?
The other day he let drop to an interviewer from the Financial Times of London that he may "go back to teaching" if the opposition Pakatan Rakyat does not gain a mandate at GE13.
That
sounds suspiciously like the ploy beloved of Lim Kit Siang who at the
approach of a general election following one in which the DAP had done
poorly, would say that it was going to be his last for he is thinking of
retiring whereupon the DAP would do better.
Of course, this
tactic drew sardonic asides from Dr Mahathir Mohamad, prime minister for
much of the time during which opposition leader Lim deployed this ruse.
Anwar
had taught at the prestigious Jesuit-run Georgetown University in
Washington, DC, for about two years after his release from jail in
August 2004 and his back surgery and recuperation in Munich.
He
returned to Malaysia early 2007 to begin campaigning for the 12GE whose
results - and consequent grueling demands on him - have set off a chain
of events whose culmination would be if Pakatan secures a lease on
Putrajaya in the coming polls.
Signs of excessive wear
Anwar, 65 next month, has not before appeared as worn and weary as he has in the last several months.
The unremitting demands of leading the movement for political change in
Malaysia that his 1998 sacking from government and party and subsequent
jailing on what is now widely regarded as trumped-up corruption and
sodomy charges have worked its attrition on his reserves of energy and
endurance.
The constant travel, here and abroad, the hand
pumping, the brutal schedule of nine to 12 speeches most Fridays through
to Sundays, the regular party meetings, the frequent court appearances
on charges ranging from reprobate sex to risqué hand signals, are taking
its toll.
The
noticeably limp handshake, the constraints on locomotion caused by
lingering back pain, the increasingly ashen-faced exterior, and the
diminishment in the range of his vocals on the stump caused, no doubt,
by the demands of a taxing speaking schedule - are all evident signs of
excessive wear.
When this is compounded by the sandpapering
quality of recurrent legal trammels placed his way by attorney-general
Abdul Gani Patail, immersion in an academic idyll must seem like
refreshing balm for battered spirits.
One is reminded of what
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos intimated to jailed rival Benigno
Aquino during a tete-a-tete while exploring terms for the latter's exile
to the United States:
"Sometimes I envy you - in jail you can be with your Plato, while here I have to talk to all these jokers."
Sequestration in academia, even one, as was the case with Aquino with
barred windows, can sometimes seem preferable to being borne along by
those endless billows that are the lot of Southeast Asian politicians
(Anwar and Aung San Suu Kyi come to mind) striving to weld a mélange of
forces to dislodge long established authoritarian and corrupt regimes.
Turned to stone
Though it's true that as Shakespeare, whose entire works Anwar read in
six years in jail (1998-2004), said, "The labour we delight in physics
pain," and despite the large crowds he draws being an elixir to a
populist politician like him, Anwar has wearied.
"Too long a sacrifice can make a stone of the heart," mused the poet WB Yeats.
Something of what Yeats felt about the effects on the Irish psyche of
prolonged suffering under British rule is perhaps discernible in Anwar
these days - the foisting of a deep, no-affect carapace on him that's
running on auto rather than is willed.
This
has rendered him wan more than witless though the latter effect is
detectable in the wilting of his humour on the hustings, hitherto a
captivating aspect of his oratorical mien.
Where once his jokes
on the stump were delivered with brio, they are now uttered without the
élan that is vital for connecting with his audience.
These are losses due to the fatigue of a marathoner but this is of course restorable through rest.
But
what would not be curable would be if he has lost the popular leader's
supreme qualifications which are that of being able to mingle easily
with followers and adversaries, to rise and fall to the level of their
intelligences, to discuss and argue without rancour, to dwell on the
same themes in different forms, and to get animated without end in the
face of the same goal.
When these strengths have waned, he can retreat to the academic or, even, memoir-penning redoubts.
Until then there are reform promises to keep and miles to go before these can safely be said to have been fulfilled.
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