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11 - Malay Muslims and the Thai-Buddhist State: Confrontation, Accommodation and Disengagement

from Part V - Muslim Minorities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2015

Ernesto H. Braam
Affiliation:
Utrecht University
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Summary

The Malay Muslims in the deep south of Thailand have a long history of asserting their identity against the assimilating force of a dominant Buddhist worldview. Buddhist Siam and its successor, Thailand, have had significant success in assimilating the wide variety of ethnic groups within its borders, including the Chinese, Lao, Khmer and others, into a form of national Thai identity. The only group that has successfully withstood the assimilation policies is the Malay community in the country's southernmost provinces of Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat. The greater the pressure that was put on to this community to surrender its explicit Malay identity, the more it has searched for — and found — ways to preserve its identity.

Historically, relations between the old Kingdom of Patani (the past incarnation of the three provinces, parts of Songkhla province and northern Malaysia) and Ayutthaya — later Bangkok — regularly led to conflict. Whenever the Burmese attacked the Siamese capital Ayutthaya, Patani would take advantage of its distraction and wrestle itself free of Siam's yoke. When the Ayutthaya kings (and sometimes queens) finally managed to push back the invading Burmese armies, they would send punitive expeditions to the South to bring the Malay vassal state back under their control. The Anglo-Siamese agreement of 1909 codified this conflict and left the Malay Muslims in Siam, as it were, on the wrong side of the border, separating them from the Malay community in what is now Malaysia, with which they share language, religion and family ties.

For many decades, Malay-Muslims in South Thailand have been discriminated against, and were considered to be khaek (guests or visitors) in Thailand. The height of the application of assimilationist policies towards Malay Muslims is generally agreed to have been during the governments of Prime Minister Phibunsongkhram (1938–44 and 1948–57). This nationalist leader glorified the Thai race, changed the name of the country from Siam to Thailand and left no space for minority identities like the Malay Muslims (and the Chinese). A host of forceful measures were put into effect. Speaking Malay was forbidden and there was strong pressure to change family names into Thai-sounding names (Gilquin 2005, p. 73).

Type
Chapter
Information
Encountering Islam
The Politics of Religious Identities in Southeast Asia
, pp. 271 - 312
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2012

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