146 18 8MB
English Pages [318] Year 1985
Islam and Malay Nationalism : A case study of the Malay-Muslims of Southern Thailand
ISLAM AND MALAY NATIONALISM: A Case Study of the Malay-Muslims Southern
of
Thailand
Surin Pitsuwan
J
Thai Khadi Research Institute Ihammasat
University
1985 ISBN 974-335-089-6
150 BAHT
In the Name of God, Most Gracious, Most Merciful
As to those who believe And work righteous deeds, They have, for their entertainment, The Gardens of Paradise, Wherein they shall dwell (For aye) : no change Will they wish for from them. Say: "If the ocean were Ink (wherewith to write out) The words of my Lord, Sooner would the ocean be Exhausted than would the words Of my Lord, even if we Added another ocean Like it, for its aid."
1
Say: "I am but a man Like yourselves, (but) The inspiration has come To me, that your God is One God: whoever expects To meet his Lord, let him Work righteousness, and. In the worship o f his Lord, Admit .no one as partner. (Qur’an XVIII: 107-110, translated by A. Yusuf All)
t
MY GRANDFATHER
HAJJI YA C QUB BIN
C
ABD AL-RA''UF
1900-1973
He admonished m e , upon embarking on my Harvard i career to read Sura al-Kahfi for guidance and '£ ♦ inspiration. During my long Harvard career r with many interruptions,
I had many occasions
’to heed his admonition. I
c
Abdul Halim
Bin *isma c Il
June 1982
FOREWORD
This thesis the Malay-Muslims important
on Islam and Malay Nationalism: of Southern
Thailand,
is unigue
A Case Study of in at least two
First, it has gone far beyond a mere description v of local revolt’s and rebellions against the central authorities. During
respects.
the past decade,
of such political government studies
there has already appeared a series
events
reforms
somehow remain
and identities
actions.
The thesis
characteristically attempts
associated presented
thus breaks *a new ground Secondly, academic with
context sense
of obligation
otherwise.
scholarship dealing
with sensitive
particular
the cultural
regional
a measure
and research.
himself who, on top of well-chosen manages
to provide
of Islam within
of Southern
reflection
studies
and
the readers
the socio-political
Thailand.
There
is a strong
It would have been so unusual all along with a calm,
and analysis.
Objectivity
of moral courage,
and emotion-provoking
issues
and
especially such
in
as this
one.
Rights
Development
the thesis basically ships.
into
the gap and
Part of the thesis was presented on Human
deeper
help fill
and involvement.
is in itself
and few, if
here should
knowledge
and scholarly
All the
movements
And yet the whole' study proceeds
objective
integration.
political
training,
of the Malay-Muslims
the
with those
it is the author
insightful
V * S launching
historical
to penetrate
for further
and intellectual
a highly
King Rama
and the,'policy of national
any, have made specific roots
following
of studies
in Thailand.
stands
Quite apart from
in the August 1983 This should
explain where
in the matter of socio-cultural
academic
workshop
relation-
value, it is to be hoped that
all
the approach
could contribute
inquiry
reformolution concerned. brands
and reality
something
of appropriate
to rethinking
and
policy and action by all parties could be free from all
with which we have for so long been
and out of which, unfortunately, solution
positive
then, the whole issue
Perhaps,
of extremism
out of thip piece of scholarly
brought
no constructive
too familiar,
and peaceful
is possible.
» «
Saneh
Chamarik
March 1985
v
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This dissertation would not have Been completed' had it not been for the contribution and assistance, intellectual and otherwise, of innumerable individuals. Although all’ of them cannot be acknowledged here, my sin-
1
cere appreciation for their part is registered on these pages. To my parents, I am most grateful for their patience and support.
I hope that they will come to see that my
turning away from the family's path of religious scholarship will be ‘made up for in some other way.
With the com-
pletion of this work and my Harvard education, and by my future endeavors, I may be able to convince them that I am, in my own way, trying to fulfill fardu kifaya, just as they, through their pious efforts in traditional Islamic education are trying to do. Throughout my academic career I have been assisted financially by many institutions.
The Rockefeller Founda-
tion deserves my deepest appreciation for its generous fellowship, which funded my course work and'research. My thanks also go to my first Acharn in political science, Professor Saneh Chamarik of Thammasat University, for pointing out for me the wonders and challenges of his chosen discipline.
A portion of this dissertation is a
result of my participation in his "Human Rights Research
in Thailand",
Through him, a grant from the Asia Founda-
tion was made available to me. I owe a debt of gratitude to- Professor Harry Jaffa of Claremont- Men’s (McKenna} .College, Claremont, California, Who initiated my interest in Islamic political philosophy and encouraged me to pursue study at Harvard, Professor Nur Yalman, of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard and Chairman of my dissertation committee, has been most generous with his time and intellectual resources.
Only h e understands how he came to the rescue
and pushed me across many abyssal passages along the academic path.
Without him, not only this work, but much else
would not have been possibleProfessor Stanley Tambiah of the Anthropology Department has been an inspiration to me on my journey into the mysterious world of the Thai polity.
His support and gui-
dance are here acknowledged. Had it not been for Professor Muhsin Mahdi, Chairman of the Near Eastern Languages and Civilization Department, I would not have come to Harvard.
His continued support
and encouragement made this final requirement of the graduate study come to a successful completion. My sincere appreciation also goes to Professor Benedict R. O’G. Anderson of the Government Department,
Cornell Uni-
versity, for his help at many turns along the way to this point of completion.
He also managed to explain to my
parents the many risks and perils and the lengthy time required for Ph.D. work. I would not have been able to present this dissertation in its complete form in time, without the tireless assistance in editing, revision and typing of Dr. Laurel Kimura.
Her kindness and patience have been extraordinary
■and, indeed, turned "a possible" into "a success" And finally, for my six brothers and four sisters, who have never seen their eldest brother stay still more than two days, this is' a symbol of my love and caring for them.
S.P.
TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE
CHAPTER
I
s
INTRODUCTION ............
Introduction
......... 1
-
Theoretical Approach Economic and Social Setting The Economy The Society CHAPTER
II
s
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND s 1902-1922 .....
27
The Royal Connection Patani as' the "Cradle of Islam” The Rebellions of 1903 and 1922 CHAPTER III
s
THE STRUGGLE FOR AUTONOMY : 1922-1945 .. 62
Resistance and Accommodation 'Prior to 1932 Political Participation and Cultural Autonomy Forced -Cultural Assimilation and the Malays 1 Reaction The Second World War and the Patani Issue The Patronage of Islam Act of 1945 GHAPTER
TV
s
ISLAMIC AFFAIRS AND THE
C
ULAMA'
REBELLIONS : 1945-1.957 ....... New Role for the
g
Ulama *
Patani Legal Autonomy Under Absolute Monarchy The Muslims' Legal Autonomy Under the Constitutional Regime The Hajji Sulong' Rebellion, of 1947-1948
Ill
PAGE CHAPTER
V
:
THE GOVERNMENT'S INTEGRATION EFFORTS : 1957-1973 .............. 166
Pondok : The Malays’ Madrasa From Pondoks to Private Schools with Secular Curriculum Access to Higher Education The Bureaucratic Recruitment t’S * The Fostering of Closer Relations of Muslim Leadership CHAPTER
VI
:
THE PATH OF VIOLENCE : 1973-1982 ......
216
General Conditions The Separatist Movement and Guerrilla Warfare The National Liberation Front of Patani (NLFP} The Liberation Front of Republic Patani (LFRP) The Patani United Liberation Organization ’ (PULO) Other Forms of political and Military Operations Islamic Fundamentalism The Dac wah Movement The Tarigah Movement The Islamic Militant Groups The International Dimension c The Ethnic Affinity The Islamic Bond The Ideological Forces CONCLUSION ................... ................. .. BIBLIOGRAPHY ................. ......
... 269
.. . .....
284
LIST OF' TABLES
PAGE
TABLES
I
Greater Patani Region ......
..... -
17
II
Results of the General Elections of of Greater Patani 1933-1948 ..........
82
The Muslim Population of ASEAN .............
270
III
LIST OF MAPS
MAP
1
Map of Thailand
2
Map of the Greater Patani Region
ABSTRACT
The dissertation in the movement among
focusses
for cultural
the Malay-Muslims
the final
periods,
responding
tics, the movement but the central
there Thai
rule.
Thailand
tonomy
their religious
consolidation ment
ship have
been penetrated
into the Thai
polity.
reaction
systematize
has always
How the Malay-
rituals
explores
group.
traditional
their griefor au-
and ideals
the process
places
"Their religious
of learning
in order
That
process
to it is analyzed.
conversion
Act of 1945,
forms,
of
of power on the part of the Thai govern-
tudtions,
the pondok
poli-
theme of tnis study.
also
over this minority
Muslims’
historical
and their aspirations
important
The dissertation
force
have expressed
Thai rule
has been another
Region
in Thai national
symbolism.
vances against through
At various
theme and binding
of Southern
Patani
autonomy took various
been Islam and. its rich Muslims
Since
have been many rebellions
to changes for
autonomy
Thailand.
of the Greater
into the Thai kingdom, against
and religious
of Southern
incorporation
and protests
on the role of Islam
efforts
and the government the "Islamic
insti-
and leader-
to integrate
them
and the MalayThe impact.,of
the Patronage attempt
law” of family
of Islam
to codify 'and and inheritance
for the Malay-Muslima is also discussed.
The disser-
tation ends with a description of the emergence of violent movements and guerrilla warfare/ Islamic fundamentalism and foreign involvement in' the latest phase of the minority group’s efforts for its cultural and religious autonomy.
MAP I
LAOS
\ \
- 1? BURMA
'stAnoih*!
I6»l{
pL
Rd El*
NORTHEAST MiWrr Raitfuscur
anoAman
s«
’
KAMPUCHEA
■r
0 CUlf.tf
THAILAND
tntjfflX«ial {wKidary Retenji toundaty R*My land abort 200m UrtttsMMOin
town MMAYS1A
50**F
Thailand
Source: John L.S. Girling, Thailand: Society and Politics, Cornell University Press, 1981.
THAfLAND
MAP XX
s I “?
KMHH
'
Kz
.-
o
w/J
TrAHf
'* vn A n ( 7At OA)
r
k straufit
fmuaav)
i TrtUnf ieundtfy °>«ym/rAa;tanJ. _______ »vr 'no/ay />nvmctr Tka ;/anJ.
tftrfencC
-
the outsiders will have to
accept Islam before they are welcome into the community by their in-laws. extremely rare.
Conversion in the other direction is (Even Muslims from outside the Malay-
speaking area will need to acquire the language ability before they can marry into the Malay society.) The most preferred cj aractei trait among the MalayMus liras is religious piety.
For this reason, religious
leaders enjoy honour, and respect from the people.
The
Imam and the Hajj is (men or women who have been on pilgrimage to Mecca) are held in high regard and act as spiritual advisors to the villagers.
While the kamnan and
the naiban are respected for their positions and relations with the state authorities, they are not regarded as equal in esteem to the Imam and his devout colleagues
Religion,
i.e. Islam, plays a highly important function in the social life of the villagers.
The ultimate goal in life is to
attain all religious virtues symbolized in the term orang baik (morally good man) or al- insan al-salih in the Arabic formulation (Fraser 1966:40)'. The central theme of this dissertation is how* the Malay-Muslims make use of their religion, with its myths and symbols , to solidify their efforts for true political and cultural autonomy.
The forms and styles of these
efforts vary in relation to the overall political atmos-
-26phere of the Thai nation.
To fully appreciate their
efforts, this dissertation will procede chronologically, starting with the final incorporation of the Malay-Muslimprovinces into the Thai state in 1902, and ending with the present violent movement for total separation and politir cal independence.
CHAPTER II THE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND The four southernmost provinces of Thailand, where the Malay-Muslims are carrying out separatist activities, have had a long history of independence and subordination. The coming of Islam in the fourteenth century to the Malay world of Southeast Asia was the third great world religion which had given rise to empires and principalities with dominion over the whole region.
Hinduism and Buddhism had
come centuries before and had left their mark upon the people.
To paraphrase Geertz, Islam did not come to con-
struct a civilization, it appropriated one when it reached this eastern extremity of its expansive dominion (Geertz 1968:11) . However, Islam did introduce a new dimension into the region’s history.
Prior to Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism
served as the basis for the region's cultures and civilizations.
Their influence had been trans-racial .
The whole
area could be taken as one cultural world linked together through Buddhism with traces of influence from the older Indic religion of Hinduism.
When Islam arrived, its in-
fluence was confined to the people of the Malay race, who inhabited the islands and the southeastern reaches of the Asian landmass.
Before Islam penetrated further into the
mainland, colonialism overtook it as a new force spreading
-28through
the region.
complications the various
Colonialism
into the power races
point
dominate. major
extremity
where
It could
cultures
be viewed
a tributary
territory
belong
the Malay-Muslims
to the Malay
the state
among
these
tend
to keep
ficult
one.
longkorn
(Rama
historians this
to coincide
with
Malaya
1969,
(Thio
Teeuw
a sense ties
Thailand
of belonging
to their
focusses
culture
and Wyatt
and- dif-
centuries
by King Chula-
and was completed
agreement
with
Thailand 1970) .
pro-
on the history
reformation
between
a slow
back through
in 1902
the final
the boundaries
be consi-
is Buddhism.
has been
study
began
who ratified
puts
of the southernmost
trace
the administrative V) , which
mainland
the mainstream.
of Thailand
began,
two
they are part of
religion
of incorporation
While
with
state
to cultivate
from
the kingdom
best
of Southern
their traditional
them apart
the process
beginning
1906,
people,
process
into
where
Islam
the Thai and Malay
Politically,
whose
is trying
and
1978:64).
world.
nation-state
vinces
area
might
separating
Culturally,
The
race
As one scholar
of Thailand
(Elliott
While
when
as the gray
formations"
the Thai
of
is also the nor-
of the Malay
one — overlap.
region
social
and
the people
of the area — the Buddhist-oriented
"The Southern
dered
among
of Thailand
the people
and the Islamic-oriented its
relations
new factors
and cultural .backgrounds.
The southern thernmost
introduced
in
the British,
and British
When
the colonial
the beginning
of the sixteenth
as Siam was only with no real
a group
their
domain
and east known)
from
Indeed,
Caught
their
the major
In the middle
of contention leaders
in Bangkok.
removed
from- positions
Thai
bureaucrats
(Bunnag
Immediately the Thai
of reform,
rule
the power o'f local pals , the local fellow
Malays,
began.
leaders
leaders
(as Siam
Gothamasan reform,
Indeed,
clear
is now
reform
for
in the affairs century,
Patani, was a bone
and the Thai
princes
and royalty
and replaced
by
1976). a movement
even during
to
the process
that
Bangkok
would
and would
appoint
its own princi-
began
reduce
to look
southward
toward
who had by then become
colonized
by the Bri-
tish and expected 1901,
of influence
the 1902
when .it became
north
British
the local
1968,
after
reaching
in the south,
the colonizing
units
in from
and efficiency
Finally,
to consoli-
moving
administrative
of the nineteenth
a capital
political
Thailand
principality
between
were
resist
security
Malay-Muslim
the French
about
principalities
the .imminent threat
and the British
to bring
at
was then known
of urgency
through
empire,
Asia
be considered
to the scattered
Indian
•reasons of national
what
connected
the sense
between
in Indochina
was forced
of state.
century,
to the people of Siam
of colonialism.
to Southeast
that could
power and bring unity
was brought
came
of loosely
power center
of a nation-state. date
powers
to be given
the Raja (king)
protection
of Patani
wrote
and support.
to Sir Frank
their
In
Swettenham
-30-
the British with
governor
the following
of the Strait appeal:
sing and interfering of Patani
Playing colonial vinces
the peaceful
might
Thai
on behalf
to misery
was
the inter-
of these Malays.
come to the rescue
rule,
was suppres-
of the people
the Malay-Muslims
the fear - of the British
upon
powers under
life
The only hope for relief
of the British
in Singapore,
the Thai government
and was condemning
and destruction. vention
with
Settlements
that other
of the Malay
the King of Patani
pro-
wrote:
...ibwill he seen that my application, for* the intervention and good offices of Great Britain, has good grounds on which it is founded, and on which such application can be made to Great Britain or some other of the Great Powers either European or others (Abdul Kadir 1901) The "others" consul
included Japan and Turkey, who maintained a k in Batavia (the Dutch capital in the East Indies)
(Gothamasan
1976:186)
While
eager- to- extend
of Her Britannic the Malay office
with
in. Patani
preferred
Siam and that
Indochina
Swettenham
on September
and the dominion
up the. peninsula
Swettenham
would' diminish
French
143-159) . Patani
states,
that London
goodwill
between
Majesty
his domain
was cautioned to maintain
2, 1901,
friendship with
as a neutral
and. British
all
by the foreign
any interference
her role
wrote
to include
India
and her affairs
buffer
(Jeshurun
back to King Abdul that he, the. king,
state 1971:
Kadir of should, try
-31to see the king of Siam, since he "felt sure His Majesty would redress any real grievances which exist" (Swettenham 1901) . There were,also other reasons why the- British did not wish to interfere with the. Patani region under Thai rule.
Because of the strategic value of the peninsula
(Kiernan 1956:1-20, 1956a: 137-157) , the Germans were pressing Bangkok for"’a concession on the island of Langawi off the, Andaman aoast 'for a coaling station, and the Russians were competing with the French for a concession to construct a canal across the Kra Isthmus.
In their efforts
to resist these mounting* pressures, any move by the British would be used as an excuse to force Thailand to concede to the other powers. Furthermore,
the British had a design on four other
important "dependencies" to the south of Patani.
These were
considered' more immediate, and further consolidation of the British hold on them would be more profitable than antagonizing Thailand over the affairs of Patani.
This diplo-
matic prudence on the part of the British paid off when, the final Anglo-Siamese Agreement of 1909 formally ceded Kedah, Kelantan, Trengganu and Perlis to Great Britain in exchange for the recognition of Thailand's sovereignty over the province of Patani and the transfer of all extra-territorial rights enjoyed by the-British subjects
back to "the ordin-
ary Siamese Courts" (Anglo-Siamese Agreement, 1909) .
-32-
Failure to enlist the British support for their struggle against Thai rule at the turn of the century did not deter the Malay-Muslim leaders of Patani and a cluster of her tributary principalities from carrying on their own efforts to win their autonomy.
The determined efforts on
the part of Bangkok to dislodge all local nobles and replace them with appointees from the capital were faced with equally determined resistance.
Mindful of the sensitivity of the
issue, the Thai reformers moved cautiously so as not to appear to disturb the already well-structured society of the Malays.
As the Siamese king, under whose direction the
administrative reform was being carreid out, admonished his ministers:
"You must be conscious at all times that we
regard Mohammadanism as a religion for those people in that part of the country" (King Chulalongkorn to Prince Damrong, March 6, 1385) . However, the general policy could not be carried out exactly as given by the king in Bangkok.
The local func-
tionaries who were responsible for administering the reform did not get along well with the people.
They were not in-
formed of the customs, Islamic law and even the Malay language spoken by the local populace.
The animosity of the
Malay-Musi ims against the Thai bureaucrats was so intense that at one point they were described as "the leeches and parasites of the state" (The Straits Independent, May 10, 1890) .
Such an image of the Thai bureaucrats remains today.
-33Beginning in 1902, the nobility was stripped of its power and all functions of the provinces were gradually transferred to the bureaucrats from the capital or provinces in the north.
The central government was careful to assign
only conscientious bureaucrats to the Muslim-dominated area. Despite this precaution, the deeper the central government penetrated into the Malay-Muslim socio-cultural world, so foreign to them, the more 'inevitable was the occurrence of social confrontation.
.The process of reform moved at a very
slow pace in the areas of finance, development of social and economic infrastructure and administration of justice. Traditionally, the nobility of the area was required to send the Bunga Mas, ornamental flowers of gold and silver as a token of vassalage to the Thai king every two and a half years.
All dependencies had to follow this state ri-
tual to express their submission to Bangkok and affirm their loyalty to the throne.
Once the reform was instituted, how-
ever, the status of the Malay provinces was also changed from that of being mere dependencies to that of "provinces" and integral parts of the Thai kingdom. The implication of this transformation was farreaching.
In the area of finance, it meant that the nobi-
lity lost its power to tax its people.
While the Bunga Mas
wast no longer expected of them, the central bureaucracy assumed full responsibility for financial affairs.
It also
meant that the nobility had to forego income which it
-34-
usually
collected
revenue.
When
broadened
to include
activities,
from
the public
the collection
system
various
the annual
along with
and the tax base was
occupations
revenue
the vassalage
and commercial
collected
by the central
* •government officials which
were
previously
of the nobility the public (Bunnag
was increased
towards
that
and associates
revoked.
the financial
reform
Exemptions
Resentment became
among
widespread
1971s 15-23) .
was behind
and privileges decided
to relatives
.themselves were
The nobility, people
granted
markedly.
realizing
the following
the majority
i t in its efforts
as symbols
to express
that
to maintain
of autonomy
its grievances privileges
of the its status
and separate
and in 1905,
b.e granted
1.
All noble immediate come from
2.
All of the above-mentioned annual land tax;
identity
requested
to its
children and grandchildren, including relations, be entitled to annual inthe government; be exempted
from
the
3. , All of the above-mentioned be excused from mili.tary services, including fees in lieu of the services; 4.
All persons already in the services lity be excused from personal tax.
Apparently
the Malay-Muslim
get back what
they had lost through
form in terms
of employment
it.
the central
However,
consider
those
nobles
nobility
and descendants
was trying
to
the administrative
and the income government
of the nobi-
which
was only who were
came
rewith
prepared or would
to be
-35enjployed by the government.
Prince Damrong, the Minister
for Interior, emphasized that in principle, they were not to be paid by virtue of their titles, but only by the merit of their services to the government. On the second request, it was decided that tax exemption would be a bad precedent for other ruling families in other parts of the country.
Furthermore, exemption from
tax based on lineage would be perpetuated long into the future, and would certainly deepen the desire for independence in the generations to come.
It was felt that any reward
rendered by the government should be for the purpose of encouraging further integration, not adding to a sense of alienation.
The continuation of royalty would have been a
most poignant symbol of a long history of independence for the Malay-Muslims of Patani and her tributaries. The third point
was also designed to differentiate
the royalty from the commoners by exemption from military services.
In response, the government would only recognize
the direct descendents of the Rajas (kings) The government was adamantly against granting the nobles their last request of exemption front services for all those who were already in the service of the local nobles because it would be tantamount to recognizing private militia that could challenge the authority of the central government in the future.
However, the Minister of Interior
recommended that the King grant exemption from personal tax
-36-
to fifty
people
(Gothamasan
or less under
1976:311-314,
Realizing
that
might
nobility
and its people,
wrote
tone of the government’s activities
Damrong
to increase
and revenues
over the provinces
1
among
the
also decided,
the pension
and his colleagues
the loss of interest taking
Prince
of each raja
197r:19-21).
anti-government
of the King,
the Raja of Patani
Bunnag
the general
response
the consent
spark
the services
with
fee for
to compensate
for
due to the government's
financial
affairs'. The Minister
to the King:
The central government's assumption of responsibility over tax collection and the refusal to grant tax privileges requested can, indeed, affect the rajas' financial status. Even though now there is no need to please them as we .once needed to, but for reason of s-Gate and political prudence, I submit that they should be 1 granted a modest increase... for their pension (Prince Damrong to King Chul-alongkorn, August 29, 1905) . In response also
exercised
clear
prudence.
to the nobility
be taken ment
to Damrong':s suggestion,
required. future
This
when
couraged
of their
in pension
services
precaution
their
incomes
had to be taken so that fell
they would
(Chulalongkorn
was
to
to the govern-
last only as long as their services
and agitated..."
29, 1905).
that it had to be made
that any increase
as a recognition
and would
He felt
Chulalongkorn
were "in the
not feel disto Damrong,
August
-37Another radical change that was introduced into the area was in the form of replacing official positions with new appointees who were either sent from outside or were willing to be coopted by the newly structured civil service system.
Where government supervision was not available
before, new positions were created.
The state, through
its bureaucracy, was taking measured steps to penetrate the Malay-Muslim society in all its dimensions.
Because
the British were also making rapid headway in their development efforts just south of the border, the central government increased the sense of urgency in implementing these measures in order to solidify Thai control over the Malay provinces.
Better living conditions in the Malay states
under the British would definitely challenge the security and the loyalty of the Malays, who happened to be separated from their own people inside Thailand due to the arbitrary boundary line drawn by outside powers.
As Damrong wrote
in his memorandum to his Sovereign: The 7 principalities of the Malays are close to the state of'-Kelantan (one of the states ceded to the -British) and government officials here are all Thais. If ever Mr. Graham (the British Resident in Kelantan) is able to develop Kelantan and attain prosperity over our 7 states, it certainly will be dangerous and will have detrimental effect on the government of our 7 states because foreigners will be convinced that being under Thai rule will not bring prosperity and development. For this reason I humbly submit that we must spare no effort in developing our 7 states so as to make them more advanced than the state of Kelantan (Damrong to Chulalongkorn, April 27, 1904).
-38The government’s tactics were to adopt the British strategies in their development strategy in every way it could.
The British emphasized the construction of infra-
structure in the form of roads, postal services and the provision of security for commercial activities.
Bangkok
followed in minute details, and tried to make the Thai presence felt and accepted as a matter of course.
Government
offices were built along with residences for governors and their entourages.
The local nobility found the efforts
overbearing and led the Raja of Patani to complain to Swettenham in Singapore: Kaluoung
"I beg that there should be no
Commissioner in the State {of PataniJ'* (Abdul
Kadir to Swettenham, December 23, 1901). However, there was one major difference between the Thais' administering their Malay states and the British supervising development efforts in Kelantan: their attitude toward the people.
Rupert Emerson observed the British
attitude quite succintly: To an extraordinary degree the British officials in these States [jtelantan and Trengganu and Kedah, three of the four taken from Thailand J, from the Advisor down, have come to identify themselves with the States they serve; almost in fact, to regard themselves as champions of the particular State in which they happen to be located (Emerson 1964:251-252). They were very clear in their mission and served more as advisors, which they were, than the colonial rulers as their compatriots in other states.
-39-
Emerson continued: There is no great array of alien economic interests to bring pressure to bear on them and they •have no desire to see such interests ihtroduced at the expense of the native tillers of the soil. It is they, and not the Sultan or his Malay councillors-, who conceive and execute policy, but in shaping the policy their chief concern has been the well-being and development of the Malays over whom they rule (Ibid. ) . The main preoccupation
of the Thai policy-makers
had always been the security side of the issue. Thus, t while the British could move confidently in their reorganization of the Malay states under their rule without fear of any political backlash, Damrong and his sovereign in Bangkok were always suspicious
of the true intention of
the Malay kings and princes they put out'of power. Minister reported to the Thai king:
As the
"Because the former
kings and princes are still living, our administrative reform will still have to make some allowances for the t
benefit of these living Malays" July 20, 1906}.
(Damrong to Chulalongkorn,
It is very clear that while the -British
were prepared to recognize the ruling families and keep them in their positions,
the Thais had -decided that the royal
privileges would end at the passing away of the "living generation". Bangkok also was bent on assimilating the local people in order to make its grip over Patani ancl its tributaries as secure as possible.
First,
the Thai high
-40-
officials forced former influential
Malay-Muslim
officers
to "apply for employment" in cities to the north.
A cer-
tain Raja of Ra'geh was himself "offered" a training post in the province of Songkhla (Bunnag 1971:16). there was a definite mission
direction from the Thai king that the
of his Siamese servants posted in the area must
"cultivate those who would enter government though they are foreigners
Majesty’s
servants"
services,
and uphold a different
to acquire Thai hearts and manners
Finally,
Secondly,
even
religion,
just as all other His
(Damrong to Chulalongkorn,
March 4, 1896) .
efforts were made on integrating the sons of the
former Malay nobility into the system by offering them opportunities general.
for on-the-job
training with the Thai governor-
All these tactics were to be applied with greater
intensity up to the present day.
Much of the resentment
on the part of the local people, which still persists, stemmed from these "assimilationist"
policies,
not favoured by elements of conservative Faced with stiff resistence in instituting Chulalongkorn nobles under
which were
sentiment.
and sustained difficulty
the reform of the local administration, was forced to admit that while the rajas and
Thai rule were praticaily stripped of power
with no hope for hereditary
privileges,
those under British
rule were treated "as angels- in heaven”, who needed to do nothing but reign as heads of their principalities.
-4L We forced them to do things they were not willing to perform and sometimes they became mere puppets. To be fair, if we were treated in the same fashion, we would not have been too happy either (Gothamasan 1976:290}. This realization of the region,
i by the king greatly affected the affairs
especially whenever
the Malay-Muslim
lea-
ders sought support from their colleagues under the British in the rebellious
efforts against the Thai authorities.
The Malay-Muslims
felt a sense of deprivation
of the lofty positions of the British Malayan Of all the reforms
in the face nobles.
in the Patani region,
nothing
engendered more hostility among the Malay-Muslims intrusion of Thai offialdom
than the
into the domain of the admi-
nistration of justice which was considered
sacred terrain.
c
In a culture where the law (Shari a) is fused most intimately with customs ( g adat) and life and its meaning is defined by that fusion and "engulfs the total person, connecting foundations
him, as far as he is concerned, of existence",
with social institutions
(Geertz 1968:111),
Invariably
reactions.
While financial
adjustments
caused hard feelings,
upper class, whose
to the deepest any tampering
invited malevolent
reform and other administrative mostly limited to the
power and interests were directly affected
the case of legal reform stirred up hostile feelings among the people at large.
-42-
The bill of reform
introduced by Bangkok in 1902,
called for all legal matters to be put under Thai law with the exception of family and inheritance cases. appointment
of Muslim judges (Qadi) was left to the pre-
rogative of the sitting Thai judges. appointment ment,
caused considerable
and the administrators
measures issue.
The
This control over
difficulty
to the govern-
were forced to seek other
so as not to appear to have the final say on the In October 1902, Damrong and his deputy introduced
a formula
by which each principality would have a pool of
six judges from which the conflicting
parties — rather than
the sitting Thai judges as before — would have the right to choose their arbiter of justice. sion was not absolute.
However, the conces-
The sitting Thai judges in the
principalities would retain
the final decision on any
case decided upon by the Qadis chosen by the parties.
If
the Thai judges approved the opinion given, then the case was to be considered final.
If there was disagreement
between the Thai sitting judge and the Qadis, the parties still had the right to appeal their case to the Thai superior court for the region where no Qadi would be admitted. Two months later, a royal proclamation was issued in Bangkok concerning
the religious courts
in Patani and
its environs, which gave even more control to the Thai authorities.
The courts could only be established
if
-43-
the governors-general approval. required
of the principalities
In the case of a deadlock,
gave their
the Qadis were
to elect one among them to give the final deci-
sion. Although this point sounds rather odd fact that they were already in a deadlock,
given the
the whole system
gave evidence to the fact that the authorities had no adequate knowledge
of how the Islamic legal system operated
and how the religious in a Malay-Muslim
leaders performed their functions
society.
Indeed,
the word Qadi was even
officially taken as Kali, a Thai word that has a rather derogatory scholars
connotation
(Siripachana
1975:66).
c
f ulama *) who were usually referred
The religious to.as the
hag ji (an honorific title for those who had made the pilgrimage to Mecca) were described in some of the official documents in
connection
with the legal reform as "those who
have gone to Kapilavastu" , a city in north India from where the mother of Lord Buddha came (Gothamasan
1976:
299-306, Bunnag 1971:15). The misuse demonstrate
of words and the confusion
the lack of knowledge and familiarity
Thai officials with local affairs. matters
of facts
as religious
of the
In such sensitive
law, the civil authorities were
bound to come into conflict
with the
c
ulama 1 , who , in
Weber's terms, had the authority of the "eternal yesterday", and acted as the custodians
of "the mores sanctified
-44-
through the unimaginably orientation
ancient recognition
and habitual
to conform" (Gerth and Mills 1958:78-79).
The Royal Connections The attempted reform of 1902 by the Bangkok government had brought disruptions institutions
to many of the long-established
of the Malay-Muslims.
The disparagement
of
their royal families was probably the most destabilizing act, which has continued
to have adverse repercussions
the affairs of the area for decades thereafter. through family connections
on
It was
that the nobility sustained
its influence and became unified against external interference
for centuries.
Calamities
that descended upon
one ruling family had always been considered as affecting all.
Thus when the royalty of the seven Malay principa-
lities of the Patani region was driven out of power, their more fortunate
colleagues,
who were indeed,
their
own kin, were ready to assist them in the efforts to regain their lost titles. The network of kinship among the Malay principalities of the past is quite obvious, considering that from the end of the seventeenth first
century until the
quarter of the eighteenth century, there was a suc-
cession ty.
the fact
of kings ruling Patani known as the Kelantan Dynas-
They reigned for forty-one years and extended the
-45-
royal network of royal kinship far and wide throughout the Malay peninsula. relations neighbors,
Aside from the traditional
family
between Patani and her northern Malay state such as Kedah, Trengganu
Kelantan connections rulers of Johore,
and Perlis,
the
brought her closer even to the
the southernmost
state on the peninsu-
la (Wyatt and Teeuw 1970:13-16). When Raja Abdul Kadir ascended the throne of Patani in 1899, the royal family of that principality was even more closely related to the Kelantan ruling nobility. ’ His grandfather,
Tengku Besar, was a Kelan-
tanese princ.e before King Mongkut raja of Patani in 1845.
(Rama V ) appointed him
Abdul Kadir's father,
Tengku
Puteh, who became the next raja, was married to Tengku Che ' , a -daughter of the ruler of Kelantan .
The last
king of Patani, therefore, was a prince of both royal families of Kelantan and Patani (Wyatt 1974:15-16, 1977:70-71). Asian kingdoms
Koch
It was common practice among the Southeast and principalities
to.consolidate
their
power and to ensure political alliances through marriages of their own descendants.
Among the Malay states, this
practice was even more emphasized, for their choices were limited to the Malay noble families as opposed to their X Buddhist neighbors to the north, who had no religious considerations
to bar them from taking sons or daughters
r46of any ruling family as in-laws (Vella 1955:327, 1954:1324a).
This fact also intensified
Gullick
the solidarity
among the Malay rulers and tended to create ' a cultural and, as a result,
a political "distance" from their
Thai counterparts. During the difficult
time of Thai penetration into
the area at the turn of the century,
rebellions
and resis-
tance formed on the basis of family ties and marital relations among the Malay nobility. in Patani, Swettenham
wrote in *1901 that the Malay rulers
met and "bound themselves any forcible
At a wedding ceremony
to make a united resistance
to
exhibition of authority on the part of the
Siamese" (Swettenham
to Chamberlain,
Noyember 20, 1901).
Their plight was viewed with sympathy by the royal families of Kelantan, Kedah
and Trengganu,
who were at pre-
cisely- the same time trying to extricate themselves from Thai rule and avoid total dislodgement overlords, officials
by their British
Thus in late 1900, the appeal to the British in Singapore was a joint effort made by related
nobles of the northern Malay states (Wyatt 1974:39-40). In the final analysis,
the blood ties and family
relations were the most effective Southern Malay-Muslims
to garner support
tance- against the encroaching rience of independence moulded
instruments for the
power.
for their resis-
Their shared expe-
from and subjugation by Siam had
them into a people united by fate and history.
-47-
It was upon this sense of shared identity and familial tie 'that Abdul Kadir and Tengku Mahmud Mahyiddin, son, built their power base and continued numerous
independence
movements
his
to inspire
from across the border
and helped keep alive the desire for autonomy from the Thai state until the present day (Stockwell 1979:142-144) .
Patani as "The Cradle of Islam" Another reason for the persistence of loyalty and ) cultural attachment people feel for Patani is its historical role as a center of Islam in Southeast
Asia.
In-
,deed, the royal families and nobility continued to be the symbols of Patani’ s independence following
the formal incorporation
gious establishment
of Patani
for many decades
of 1901, and the reli-
and its environs served
as the link between these elites and the populace at large.
Like any Muslim
society,
the
c
ulama
1
served
as a legitimizing force to the powers that be and their support was crucial in the maintenance of political power. pendencies,
the
c
In the case of Patani and its de-
uTama ’ played a decisive role and con-
tinues to give definite for separate
and application
inspiration for the struggle
identity and even separatist
The strength of that inspiration
movements.
is rooted in Patani ’s
historical role- as "a cradle of Islam'1.
-48-
The exact date of the Islamic conversion
of the
Patani region has not yet. been established (Winzeler 1974:260, Fraser 1960:20-26, Teeuw and Wyatt 1970:4). Writing in 1613, d'Eredia speculated that Patani adopted Islam before Malacca
traditionally known as the first
"abode of peace" in the reg'ion- (Mills 1930:49). research
In his
into the arrival of Islam in Indonesia, G.W.J.
Dr ewes found that in Trengganu, a neighbor of Patani, the new religion
was firmly established
"1387 at the latest". Tefeuw (1970:4) conclude
by 1386, or
From this finding, Wyatt and that "there is no reason why it
should not have reached nearby Patani by that date, particularly given Patani ’s repute
as an early center of
Islam". In keeping with the Southeast symbiosis
Asian tradition of
between religion and polity (Smith 1978) and
the adoption of the "legitimizing ideology” by the ■wielders of power before the popular, conversion,
Islam
was embraced by the royal households, 'whose members came its proponents
be-
through their intimate relations
with its- learned exponents
Cc ulama 1 ).
The dharma (morality or duty- as interpreted by the Brahmins)
and artha (self-interested
political-econ-
omic actions on the part of the rulers) are two HinduBuddhist concepts widely accepted as the foundation of state legitimacy in pre- Islamic Southeast
Asia.
With
-49-
the arrival became
of Islam,
the Islamized
the same mystical Islamic
states
conversion, tical
the' riegara/agama (polity /religion) Malay
dichotomy
relationship.
of the region
the new- religion
status.
From
which
expressed
In Patani-, as in other
at the time of the Islamic assumed
an immediate
the time of conversion,
poli-
the region
of Patani
began to gravitate
away from the center
political
power of the Thais
and fostered
with
th.e Malay
of Patani ’s power during
part of the seventeenth for the flourishing possible
of Islamic
of Islam,
time was served
Wyatt
When
colonial
Western
on the Malay
works
scholars
readers.
early
nineteenth
established
Daud wrote
ibn
centur
Abdillah
numerous
(Ander-
producing religious
****'* ‘
-' Patani
1970:4). ibn Idris
for
y
By the 'middTe of the eighteenth
and Teeuw
by that
1968:215-219).
their own original
truly deserved
of a ’’cradle of IslaA-in- Southeast
c
which
their foothold
was already
:
92, Wyatt
Hall
Arabia,
f amous-'works of Arab scholars 1
Malay
between
Asia,
1970:297,
Patani
who wrote
and translated
learning.
as its trading center
powers
peninsula,
the early was prepared I This was made
communication
and Teeuw
factor.
the ground
and Southeast
by Patani
son 1980:46,
Islamic
century,
by the intensified
the heartland
her relations
world with Islam as the unifying
The height
of
Asia"
Indeed,
one Patani
theology
the title
Winzeler
al-Fatani,/who
works on Islamic
and
1975: native,
in 1809
( 1 usul
al-din)
-50-
and jurisprudence foremost
(fiqh) , was recognized
as one of the
authorities of Islamic sciences of Southeast
Asia (Salleh 1974:91., Abdullah 1967:131-137). Not irrelevant to the present situation Patani independence movement
is the fact
of the
that these
great scholars of former Patani established their circles of students and followers in Mecca,
the spiritual
center of the Muslim world, and thereby extended their influence
through disciples from all over the Muslim
world of Southeast
Asia.
The present sentiment
of sup-
port for the movement comes from inside Malaysia, nesia and the Philippines. religious
Indo-
For all of them have had
links with the numerous religious institutions
of Patani. The glorious
past symbolized by the nobility and
their familial connections with the Malay ruling houses and the image of Patani as a "cradle of Islam" in the region,
can inspire a separate identiy of Patani only to
a certain extent. independence
The momentum of the struggle
for
could very- easily wear off once those fa-
milies were removed from positions of power and influence.
Now that many institutions of learning have been
created to replace the traditional madrasa of Patani, its past contribution
to Islamic scholarship
forever sustain Southeast its fate.
cannot
Asian Muslims ' interest in
What is of paramount importance
to the con-
« * -51tinuation of Patani 's strong identity and what lends support to its irredentist movement is the uncompromising attitude of its own people.
The Malay-Muslims of Patani
possess what Milton Gordon calls a "shared sense of peoplehood" (Plax 1976:20).
It is this sense of being separate
’from the dominant populace of the Thai nation and its bureaucratic apparatus that can be identified, as the singlemost crucial factor that sustains the conflicts and violence in Southern Thailand today.
It is, in other words, the
problem of ethnicity.
The Rebellions of 1903 and 1922 The first collective reaction to the reform in the Patani region came in 1903-, one year after the reform was introduced.
The movement was coordinated by the Raja of
Patani, Abdul Kadir, who offered a two-pronged strategy: general resistance to draw more oppressive measures from the Thais in order to spark violent rebellion against the new system, and at the same time, seeking foreign intervention, particularly from the British, who were now very interested in the Malay states (Kiernan 1956:1-7, Klein 1959:119-136).
At first, the rajas refused to acknowledge
the order requiring them to relinquish power over their own domains.
Then they ordered their subordinates to boy-
cott all meetings with the authorities, which eventually
-52led to resignation caused
much
assistance would
en bloc.
concern
This
general
resistance
to the Thais,
because
without
at the district
be ineffectual.
the Thais spector
The most
did not know
general
and village
important
the language
reported
levels,
to the Minister
agitate
to hate
the government”
Taking transition general
being dismantled,
challenged
situations transferred
to the British,
principalities civil
ticularly control ready
of Legeh,
strife
and spill to seize
the case
of Legeh,
7 , 1901),
because into
and Saiburi
raja
where to move
Phaya
soon
were The to be
serious. were
could
Sukhumvinit,
The
afflicted par-
get out of
the British
were
into the area.
was described
by Chulalongkorn
struc-
supervi-
This was considered
Kelantan
whose
to the
populace.
line,
the violence
any opportunity
born "and senile" March
Rahman
the
principalities,
particularly
and violence.
dangerous
local
boundary toe
Thai
establishments
by the enraged
the Kelantan
during
'while the former
In all seven
and new government
along
to
Sukhum-
contributed
the new one under
was not yet in place.
directly
(Phaya
of power
elements
of law and order,
forces
with
of the vacuum
period,, subversive
security
are trying
12, 1903) .
advantage
breakdown
ture was sion
March
An in-
of Interior:
with and the rajas
to Damrong,
was that
of the Malays.
to work
vinit
all reforms
problem
"He have no people the people
local
In
as ".most stub-
(Chulalongkorn
to Damrong,
the inspector-general,
-53reported 3s follows: Ti,e chaos could very well engulf the affairs of the seven states by someone inviting the raja of Legeh to spark violence. Once that happens, the British will surely argue that Kelantan is being affected and will inevitably intervene. And the raja is not known for his intelligence either" (Sukhumvinit to Damrong, March 5 , 1901) . With or without outside encouragement, the raja ordered his former functionaries to resign in protest against Thai rule and was himself .braced for a showdown.
That he was counting
heavily on British assistance could be gleaned from his letter written one year before to Sir Frank Swettenham, Governor o'f the Straits Settlement late in 1902: I trust that the troubles and grievances, which are being imposed on my people, will be seen by Your Excellency to be so harassing and unbearable that the peace and well being of the state are endangered, and that it will be seen that such action on the part of the Government of Siam is contrary to the terms on which Legeh agreed to become a state contributary to Siam and contrary to the terms of the document delivered to me by the King of Siam when formally recognising my nomination as Rajah of Legeh by my people and also that it will be seen that my application for the intervention and good offices of Great Britain has good grounds... Such action on the part of Siam towards the Malay states, in this .part of the Malay Peninsula would be likely to arouse much disturbance in the North of the Malay Peninsula (Abdul Kadir to Swettenham, December 23, 1901) . What worried the Thai authorities most was a call to. arms on the basis of religious persecution.
They realized
how potentially explosive the.situation would be if race and religion were to be injected into the ongoing conflicts.
-54-
As Chulalongkorn himself remarked to his Minister of Interior: "I fear that the Malays would rally around the Malays and the Thais would group with the Thais..-, the Malays could very well make troubles by appealing to their religion" (Chulalongkorn to Damrong, March 7 , 1901) . i The raja of Legeh realized his ultimate appeal also and raised the issue in his letter to Swettenham: The men, inhabiting in Legeh, are mostly Mohammadans and when the Siamese festival takes place, all the Chiefs are forcibly invited by the said Kalwong (Thai Commissioner) to kneel down and bow to the portrait of His Majesty the King of Siam and the idols (of Lord Buddha) opposite to it. To worship idols is, it is known abroad, strictly prohibited in Mohammadan Religion. This causes a feeling of disgust and dis-, content among the whole inhabitants in Legeh (Tengu Ngah Shamsooden, Rajah of Legeh to Sir Frank Swettenham, January 18. 1902). The Thai authorities considered him too much of a threat to leave him in his old post.
He was removed and
sent into exile in Songkhla, a city to the north, on March 15, 1901. however.
His political activities did not stop with exile, His colleagues who were still active in their
posts continued to communicate with him throughout his exile and encouraged him to return to his principality to join their efforts in resisting Thai rule.
One colleague was
the raja of Saiburi, who enlisted the support of the religious leaders in his small .principality to boycott the religious court being set up by the authorities (Salleh 1974:35).
The raja of Saiburi lodged his protest against
-55-
the Thai
encroachment
merchant,
to Robert
who eventually
to annex. Kelantan the raja
(Davies
time the resistance
number
up the peninsula
While
the Thai Kelantan
against
proper,
the Thais
plus men
relative der.
were
emotions
in the- area
from
Kelantan
to the Thai
own plan
to convince
not give
them protection
British
general
cipality.
In Rahman, and the Straits the uprising
force
finally
long
was also
religious
judges
to resort
to force,
the direction
it was
they should
resigned
decided
of his own bor-
the raja's could
all seek
that a governor in Saiburi
stationed
submitted
between
(Kiernan
The village
in protest
in the prin-
in the middle
in Singapore
and in some
some
1976:292).
already
universal.
used
the Saiburi-Kelantan
a bone of contention
Settlement
in-
the Malays
the raja
to take up residence
the police The raja
resistance
that the authorities
and that
the government
and Saiburi.
among
authorities,
(Gothamasan
had to be sent
to reinforce
along
protection,
1974:36).
when
under
was organized,
down
ran high
his people
intervention Eventually
putting
and
At the same
British
in Patani
(Salleh
government
states,
12).
under
deteriorated
to stir up trouble
According
Malay
1902:7-8,
to settle
a British
the British
of Indians,
authorities
The situation forty
Duff,
to the Thai .authorities
moved
side
convinced
and her neighboring
of Kelantan
a considerable
William
of 1903. Bangkok
1956:9-19).,
headmen
and the government
cases,
bribery,
and had
to induce
-56-
some
complacency
tually
removed
period
(Damrong
April
19,
among
and sentenced
were
Due
and economic
Thai
dangerous
efforts
even
a German
to their
merchant.
before
the reform
general
uprising
(Archibald
ral to order protested
when
Archibald
on October
any official
Kadir
by the Thais
came
the Thai
functions
his intimate
by the Thais. of ammunition
the British
the Thai minister
22, 1901,
two full months
promulgated, raja would
of Lansdowne,
him to surrender
reform*. Through
Archer,
informed
led by the Patani
and ordered
reform
a shipment
was to be formally
the time
Abdul
design
the attempted
to Marquis
of Patani states
from
was considered
es-
for the area. As men» lead and sustained the resis-
in Bangkok,
of f oreign Phromyong 1974:24, Hadbamrue 1968:73).
It was the first official
ct
on the part of the government to institute a link between the central authorities and the "religious notables" (McVey 1976:96) of the Muslim community.
It can be said that the
central leadership now recognized there existed a way to use ."religious beliefs, practices and institutions to provide cohesiveness to the realm and legitimacy to the holding of power" (Smith 1978 :vi) .
In this case, it was the
c
ulama‘
the mosque councils, the madrasa and the office of the Shaikh al- Is lam (Chular a jamontr i ) that were "integrated" into the state's officialdom (Haemindra 1977:93, Fraser 1960:154). Indeed, it was a political move to weaken
the separatist
movement under the leadership of the traditionally elite families such as Tengku Mahyiddin and’Tengku Abdul Jalal and their relatives.
A close examination of the Decree,
its contents and the personal accounts of its promoters , reveals that the "patronage of Islam" was not quite what the phrase implies.
-101The Patronage of Islam Act of 1'9'45 .The strong resistance the government faced in its effort to integrate the Malay-Muslim population into the socio-political structure of the Thai state was caused, in large measure, by the traditional elites, including the °ulama' and the descendants of former royal and noble families.
From the very beginning of the national unifi-
cation program of King Chulalongkorn (1868-1910) , rebel-: lions and uprisings were invariably inspired and led by these traditional elites.
Without their cooperation and
support, there could be no peaceful coexistence between minority groups and the mainstream Buddhist population. Ways had to be found to first integrate- these elites into the state power structure and instill a sense of belonging in them.
The foregoing discussion about the role and po-
litical sophistication of these elites suggested that to leave them outside the national political process would be tantamount to giving them incentive to move more quickly towards total separation from the Thai nation.
It is
quite clear that they possessed the trust and the confidence of the populace. The policy followed by Bangkok until the end of the Second World War had been one of benign neglect.
"Be sure
to make it clear," King Chulalongkorn once admonished his ministers, "that we recognize Mohammedanism as a religion
-102of our nation for that .region and for that group of people" (Chulalongkorn to Damtong, March 6 , 1896).
Little else
was done to solicit the support and cultivate a sense of loyalty among those who counted, however,
As long as there
was no overt opposition, the situation* was considered normal.
If and when crises occurred, they would be dealt with
on a case-by-case basis. The unique situation of the Malay states led to such a response.
The central government had very little expe-
rience in dealing with a foreign culture with its own set of values and institutions so drastically different from those prevailing in other parts of the country.
It needed
time to become familiar with "that group of people" and their social and cultural institutions before any meaningful program could be designed to co-opt them.
The new
political ideology introduced into Thailand in 1932, brought and end to absolute monarchy, transferred sovereignty to the people, and fostered a renewed sense of urgency to complete the national integration process through political participation and modernization efforts.
When the
parliamentary system failed and an ultra-nationalistic policy was promulgated, with devastating effects upon the cultural identity of the Malay-Muslims, a new formula had to be found.
The fluid situation in the international
scene made it imperative for Bangkok to bring in the religious elites and give them 'official recognition.
Failure
-103this time would have led to the final separation of the Greater Patani Region. Faced with that undesirable prospect, Pridi Phanomyong, the Regent, proclaimed The Patronage of Islam Act on May 3 , 1945, which aimed at breaking the impasse between the government and the powerful
c
ulam'a1 ,
The preamble
of the Act illuminates clearly what the real intention of the proclamation was about: Whereas the constitution of the Thai kingdom grants full freedom of religion to the people with the King as the Great Sustainer of religions (Akhara Sasanupathampaka) and considering the fact that some Thai people in a certain region profess Islam, it is appropriate that the Muslims should be assisted and protected in.their religious affairs... In a way, what the new government wanted to do was to contain the damage done by the Pibul cabinet and its forced assimilation program which was in effect between 1938-1944.
Almost driven, away from participating in the
national political process, the courted back into the system.
c
ulama* were now being
In order to achieve this
goal, the government disguised its real intention to control,and regulate the activities of the Muslims' religious affairs by extending its assistance and protection to the leading exponents of Islam.
The Buddhist monks (Sangha)
were treated in the same manner when they were being absorbed into the Thai polity in order that their services would help strengthen it.
When the religious hierarchy
-104"was organizationally strengthened, . , (it) was also ppli,tically regulated" (Tambiah 1978:115),
Exactly the same
thing happened with the Malay religious leaders. The king's duty as sustainer and protector of the state relgion (Buddhism) was extended to cover all religions within his realm.
The Act stipulated that new insti-
tutions be established to serve as mediator between the Muslim community and the government.
One of these was the
office of the Chulara j amontri , which was the equivalent of of the Shaikh al-Islam 1926:275).
of the early Islamic empires (Kramers
The occupant would.be considered the spiritual
leader of all Muslims in Thailand.
He would advise the king
and his government o n the ways and means to assist the Muslims and their religious activities.
The Chui araj amontri
would be "His Majesty's personal aide fulfilling His royal duties in the patronage of Islam" (Article III) .
Again,
the office was established as a counterpart of the Sangharaja (the Supreme Patriarch) of the Buddhist religious hierarchy (Tambiah 1976:230-231). The Act also directed the government to establish a purely Islamic educational institution for the Muslim children whose parents hitherto had been reluctant to send them to other schools operated by the government.
This
special school would have special curricula designed to educate its students with proper Islamic instruction. graduates of this institution, to be named "The Islamic
The
-105College
of Thailand",
scholarships college
would
be qualified
for pilgrimage
was
later
government's
to Mecca
established
conscious
the locus of racial
the South
to the central
The most regard
which
"The Central
Committee
are a sizeable
called
the provision
with regard vinces" c
(Article
ulam5 ’ and religious
missal
would
teed that those would
never
to policy
notables
loyalty
with
in Arti-
loyalty
charged
Committees
in those
pro-
of all these
appointment
This
of
the Minister
the advice
recognition
with regard
with
Committees
to Islam
their
VI) .
ulama ' whose
be bestowed
matters
Islamic
To assure
(Article c
in
and "in provinces
to the Provincial
be "in accordance
ster of Interior"
was included
population
pertaining
VII) .
of -atten-
tension
of Thailand"
Muslim
of advice
to affairs
the
for the establishment
of ..Interior may set up provincial with
the focus
and religious
of Islam"
cles V , VI, and VII,
there
The
reflecting
part of the Act of 1945
to the "patronage
where
to draw
IV} ,
area.
relevant
Islamic
(Article
in Bangkok/
desire
tion from
for the King’s
safety
and disof the Mini-,
clause
guaran-
was questionable
and their contributions
to the Muslim
community
would
not be welcome. While the Muslim
an analysis
religious
suffice
it to briefly
mediate
effects
of this formal
leadership discuss
will here
attempt
be given
to integrate in Chapter
the .real intent
of this Act of 1945.
Vr
and im-
-106First of all, it is gather obvious that the Act was drawn up and promulgated in response to the deteriorating situation in the Malay states.
The possibility of being
forced to relinquish the Greater IJatani Region and its eventual inclusion into the emerging Malay Union was very real.
The fact that the ultra-nationalist government under
Pibul Songkram led the country .into the Second World War in alliance with defeated Japan, made that prospect even more threatening.
The Malay-Muslim leaders were counting
on the British to press fox an area-wide referendum to support their claim that the populace preferred a union with Malaya rather than remain as second-class citizens of Thailand.
As Tengku Mahyiddin put it, reflecting the general
sentiment : In the name of humanity and justice we crave that you (the British) do not.recognize the Siamese Government before thoroughly investigating the Fascist ways of administration in the four Malay States is South Siam. Our endurance under the Siamese officials' maladministration is exhausted. We request that a plebiscite be held in the four states" (Haemindra 1976:222). The government's strategy was to appease the region’s religious leaders by bestowing them with titles and recognition and "denied Mahyiddin of his power base”, as Cham Phromyong, the first ChUlarajamontri said (Phromyong 1974: 24).
When the government was forced to return four states
taken from French Indochina towards the end of. the war, Bangkok was fearul that the British would take away the
-107Greater Patani region as desired by the Malay leaders — a return favour for their cooperation during the war, We sent 90 G ulama ’, whose support Mahyiddin would require if he wanted to cede the Thai territory, to foster their friendly relations with fellow; Muslims in the capital.,. They were sent back to the South when the atmosphere was calm" (Ibid.). The patronage of Islam, therefore, was "a short and immediate measure" that the government and some Muslim leaders in the capital devised to counter the irredentist sentiment during the Second World War.
In that context,
it was not a satisfactory remedy for the age-old anti-Thai temperament among the Malay-Muslims in the South. Secondly, the language of the Act of 1945, for the first time, revealed a significant change in Bangkok's atitude toward the Malay-Muslim minority in the South.
They
became officially "the Thai people who profess Islam" (prachachon chao Thai thi nabtue Islam) (Preamble) .
Since the
final incorporation in 1902, they had been referred to as "Khake", "Malayu" and "Mohammedans". The patronage of Islam < Act now equated them with the Muslims in Bangkok whose identity had already been intimately linked with the Thai state (Scupin 1 930 ).
It was this "unilateral change" of designa-
tion that was to become a source of many painful conflicts between the central government, through its bureaucracy, and the Malay-Muslims who still loathe the phrase "Thai-Islam"
► -108Finally, the establishment of institutions fox management and coordination of Muslims' affairs "with the advice and consent of the Minister of Interior" made those institutions dependent on the wishes and whims of the central government.
While appearing to be rendering patronage
to the Muslims, in fact the bureaucracy gained more control over all the religious affairs of the Malay-Muslims in the South.
Each mosque would require the government's appro-
val for its selection of the Imam and his council members (Article VIII) ,
While the Act might have brought titles and
prestige to some Muslim leaders in the capital and the central area, it became a divisive issue in the South, wherethe majority of the Muslims were.
The Malay-Muslims became
"loyalists and separatists", to borrow the phrase employed by Suhrke (1977) .
Those who participated in this process
of "official recognition" would be regarded as betraying the community's aspiration for cultral autonomy and political independence.
Far more than that was the sense of
mistrust and suspicion of the government's sincerity in the affairs of the community in general.
The office of
the Chularajamontri, the Central Islamic Committee of Thailand and the Provincial Islamic Committees, all have been rendered ineffective from the very beginning due to the "center-oriented nature" of these institutions.
Rather
than foster a sense of belonging among the Malay-Muslim minority, the new institutions served as symbols of further
-109- , government interference into the community's affairs.
As
will be- seen in the next chapter, when some of the "officially" recognized members of these institutions realized that their offices were being used by the government to assuage irredentist tendencies with little intention to improve the conditions of life for the minority group, they turned against the government with all the credibility and authority invested in their offices by the government itself . For the Malay-Muslims of Southern Thailand, the period between 1922 and 1945 was a period of struggle to * maintain their cultural and political identity amidst the changing events within the Thai state.
The Thai "ethnic
chauvinism" under King Wachiravut with the government's forceful drive to introduce Thai secular education into the Greater Patani region was met with stiff resistance and an area-wide rebellion in 1922.
When the parliamentary
system was instituted in Thailand for the first time in 1932, the Malay-Muslim leaders displayed their political I sophistication by their "restrained participation" and won the majority of seats from the region.
When it was
obvious that their goal for autonomy and eventual independence would not be served through parliamentary participation, they once again turned to their traditional elites and solicited support from the Malay population across the border in British Malaya.
With the assumption of power
-110-
of the ultra-national,i.st Pibul policy during
the war,
to the British
forces. became moved
efforts
Finally,
more realistic,
and led Patani efforts ment
forced
patronage to abandon
an open movement region
from
(independence)
government leaders
in Bangkok
in the South.
will
be focussed
their original
for separation
coincided
on
who tried
to
with
objective
of the Greater The intensity
the independence
states , which .finally won
in 1957.
separation
of Islam more meaningful,
the Thai kingdom,
and emotions
of the Malay
occupation
for final
attention
turn'ed
for their coopera-
of the "rect-gnized" leaders
the government's
but who were
the central
chapter,
leaders
the Japanese
prospect
the religious
In the next the roles of some
against
and his pro-Japan
Patani
in exchange
when the
to integrate
make
the Greater
for support
tion in the war
Songkram
of the move-
their merdeka
CHAPTER IV ISLAMIC AFFAIRS AND THE 1945-1957
ULAMA
1
REBELLIONS
It has been generally recognized that one of the lasting effects the Seond World War brought upon Southeast Asia was an upsurge of nationalism, which eventually led to national independence at the conclusion of the war (Hall 1968, Benda 1958, Halland 1953).
Various elements
and indigenous forces within the region became politicized through their participation in the war efforts against the Japanese occupying forces and their sudden realization that the colonial powers were vulnerable after all. The age of colonialism came t