Friday, 17 May 2013 11:44
Where was God on May
6?
Written by Bob Teoh
My daughter rang me from Sydney first
thing on May 6, the day after the ruling coalition was nearly swept out of
power, to wish me happy birthday.
"Are you disappointed," she came
straight to the point, knowing how hard I had prayed, hoped, and campaigned for
a new Malaysia. A Malaysia where we can have a diet of hope instead of fear. A
new nation where we can love our friends as much as our enemies. A new homeland
where there is no place for racism. A new bangsa Malaysia where our children
and their children could grow up to be the persons that God Almighty had
created them to be.
"No, I am not disappointed. Praise
the Lord for answering my prayers; not in the way I had wanted it but in His
sovereign will, the way Malaysia needed it," I said and she was stumped
momentarily possibly wondering how I could accept the results of the general
elections the previous day. But she understood.
I had travelled wide and far from Kota
Kinabalu to Kota Marudu, from Kuching to Serian, from Gelang Patah to Kluang,
and through the Klang Valley, and to Taiping where my wife and I voted. I could
feel the groundswell. I was sure the opposition would win with a comfortable
margin. The opposition didn't win but it didn't lose either. The mandate was
stolen from under their feet.
Even the White House frowned upon polls
irregularities while it congratulated Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak on the
BN victory.
Its acting spokesperson Patrick Ventrell
said the White House is aware of the concerns over the irregularities and notes
that the opposition parties faced significant restrictions on access to the
media.
"We note concerns regarding reported
irregularities in the conduct of the election, and believe it is important that
Malaysian authorities address the concerns that have been raised. We look
forward to the outcome of their investigations," he added.
Where was God, and why did He allow the
electoral fraud? I don't know. All I know is that He was there and is still
there, sovereign over all His creation. And the GE13 was just a small speck
that didn't and couldn't have escaped His notice.
When I told my wife, Kim, that our friend,
Baru Bian, PKR Sarawak chief, had suffered a devastating defeat in Limbang
parliamentary seat in his first outing there, she asked me to call Baru
immediately.
Disappointment is an understatement even
for a man who suffered two straight defeats since 1991 before eventually
becoming the assemblyman for Ba' Kelalan in the 2011 state elections.
"I was stunned. More shocked when
finally not even one seat from the rural areas we contested won," he wrote
in his thank you note to friends.
"Deep within me, I was saying, God
did not do His part of the bargain because all seems unreasonable, unacceptable
and absolutely unjust", he confessed.
Although defeated, Baru was not forsaken.
Soon phone calls and text messages began pouring in.
"I shed my tears too," said one
SMS.
A pastor in Limbang texted to inform Baru
that many of the Sunday school kids cried upon hearing the news that he lost
Limbang.
Another pastor from Miri reminded Baru of
one of their our favourite hymns, God on the mountain:
Life is easy, when you're on the mountain
And you're got peace of mind
Like you've never known
But things change, when you're down in the valley
Don't lose faith, for you're never alone.
And you're got peace of mind
Like you've never known
But things change, when you're down in the valley
Don't lose faith, for you're never alone.
Another friend e-mailed him Psalm 30:5,
"Your sadness may last for a night, but joy will come in the
morning."
"I pray that the night may not be too
long," Baru responded.
His second son rang from Adelaide to say
his Overseas Christian group on campus is "mighty proud" of him. This
lifted his spirit.
Emmylyn, 17, his youngest daughter's
response was, "For this reason I must consider going into politics!"
"Then
I began to realise that this is a struggle, a ‘perjuangan', a political evolution
that may take some time. It may go even beyond my time and my generation,"
Baru said.
"I must confess, it's so tempting to
surrender, to give up to throw in the towel as it were, but now I hear the
voices of many of you who chose to walk this same road with me urging me to
move on and not to lose heart but together we will carry on to realise our
Malaysian Dream," he added.
SinChew
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