My Side of History.

AuthorShome, Anthony S.K.
PositionBook Review

My Side of History. By Chin Peng. Singapore: Media Masters, 2003. Softcover: 527pp.

For those growing up in Malaysia and Singapore in the 1950s and 1960s, the Chin Peng name was congruent with dogged frightful terror and for some, a heroic sense of awe for all things anti-establishment. Held incommunicado for much of the following decades, his first public appearance in 1999 was a history waiting to be told.

The book is a narration of Chin Peng's experiences as a guerrilla with the CPM--Communist Party of Malaya (until the 1960s, it was called the MCP--Malayan Communist Party) as told to the two writers of the book: Ian Ward and Norma Miraflor. It is a gripping story of a man who devoted his life in pursuit of communist rule in Malaya and Singapore, with its attendant elements of high drama, intrigue, violence, and the tragic outcomes that are still being felt by families in many countries. He was first an anti-Japanese fighter in the Malayan People's Anti-Japanese Army (MPAJA) in 1942 (p. 67). The CPM had an alliance with the British against Japanese occupation but parted company after the war.

Chin Peng's guerrillas peaked at only 5,000 against the "several hundred thousand troops" of the Allied Forces (p. 26). The hardship the guerrillas had to endure, from deep in their Malayan jungle bases with meagre food often exacted from villagers, was a point Chin Peng did not miss

to make to recount his resolve for a liberated Malaya.

Chin Peng was born Ong Boon Hua on 21 October 1924 in Sitiawan, a small town in the state of Perak in peninsular Malaysia to parents who were reasonably well-off, hardly your stereotypical deprived peasantry of revolutionary struggles. He joined the CPM in January 1940 when he was sixteen years old--by then the party had been in existence for ten years since its formation in Singapore (p. 57). He became the CPM's chief (secretary-general) in 1947. Though it was not officially banned, the party was subject to frequent harassment by the authorities during its early years.

Chin Peng's baptism as a communist began with his readings of Mao Zedong's war against the Japanese and later the Kuomintang (KMT). At the time, overseas Chinese in Malaya were divided between the loyalists of the KMT and the more radical sympathizers of the Communist Party of China (CPC). Young Chinese like Chin Peng were drawn to Mao who they regarded as the epitome of a blossoming Chinese nationalism while the older overseas Chinese stayed faithful to the KMT. Chin Peng was enthralled by Marx and Lenin whose writings, then proscribed by British Malaya, were smuggled into the...

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