Must we stop laughing – even excessively?
As published in Malay Mail today
Comment by Frankie D’Cruz
SAY that again: Jokes should not cause excessive laughter?
Comedy
 Court pair Allan Perera and Indi Nadarajah, whose trademark searing 
social and political satire gets us laughing out loud, might soon be out
 of work. As would other comedians.
Wait: There’s to be gender
 segregation at concerts. If one took his daughter to a concert, she 
would have to sit in another row. No father will accompany his child to a
 performance again.
Brand Malaysia is being systematically 
destroyed. The new guidelines by the Department of Islamic Development 
Malaysia (Jakim) do not raise national happiness. The updated rules are a
 dent to closeness.
We are supposed to create awareness of 
love and affection for Malaysia to remind the people the importance of 
uniting, but siege mindset seems to rule.
Let’s just zero in 
on laughter and who better to comment on it than Perera: “Must Malaysia 
stop laughing? What is excessive laughter? How do you judge excessive 
laughter? How does laughter do harm? What decibel of laughter is 
excessive?”
Perera was stumped over the Jakim’s guidelines: 
“One of the greatest weapons in society is laughter. Even in times of 
uncertainty, we must laugh together as family.
“The last thing
 anyone should do is to take away laughter. People in the audience have 
said we helped them with their pain, even if it was only during our 
show. That should speak volumes for laughter.”
Perera says 
everybody has a funny side. Not true. Jakim doesn’t. And it should 
elaborate what it means by jokes should be “sparing”, “toe the line”, 
and not make light of serious and mournful matters that lead to “extreme
 laughter”.
Only those who don’t have humour in their lives 
don’t indulge in laughter. Their loss. Bottom line: Who is Jakim to tell
 us how we should laugh?
Why is it those who murder must die 
while those who kill the spirit of Malaysia go free? Consider — gender 
separation at concerts is a major knock on the diverse cultures of 
Malaysia and a threat to communal interaction and democracy.
We
 wonder what the Tourism Ministry thinks about a family outing for a 
concert. Especially when the wife and daughter sit in another section.
Let’s not delve into Muslims and non-Muslims. It’s about secular Malaysia never becoming a developed country.
If
 Putrajaya allows this, Jakim might next extend it to malls, public 
transport, supermarkets and cinemas. Wouldn’t these impact non-Muslims?
We
 don’t need anyone to police our ordinary daily lives and prey on our 
consciousness. We want to enjoy the beauty of literature, dance and 
music. We want to embrace knowledge.
It’s about respect, tolerance and trust. It’s about imparting wisdom and developing the future of Malaysia.
Song
 lyrics that do not contain “goodness and pure values”, in addition to 
“bringing awareness” and “leading to repentance”, are not it. It’s about
 the sheer joy of entertainment and not being that unfortunate 
stereotype certain quarters are trying to create.
The joke is 
we are losing a sense of humour and failing to accept there’s nothing 
wrong with laughing at ourselves. In an ego-littered minefield, one 
misstep can forever alter the interpersonal landscape. 

 
 
Dear Bro Haresh,
ReplyDeleteThank God........P.Ramlee, A.R. Tompel and Hamid Gurkha died long ago, otherwise Jakim would have made them unemployable.
Cheers
Peminat Sukan JB