On Re: Imagine
Humans are inherently imaginative. In fact, it is arguably the essential trait in surviving the wilds. It made us much better, that brought the best out of each of us and elevated the intellectual bar we expected of ourselves. Not so long ago, our forefathers gathered by the fireside telling stories with just shadows. Some stories are exaggerated, yes; but some are ingenious ways to model powerful life lessons for the future generation. From the stories, we know not to swim in river with current too strong and to settle at highland away from flood. Imagination is not restricted by its form. The compelling narrative of religion and myth are engraved on surfaces of rocks and clays. Later, imagination became poems, plays and music. Then, drama, images, and video games. Eventually what was once just mere fragments of imaginations in our mind, became a presentable ordinariness, yet each unique in their own way.
Imagination is an experience unique and personal to its beholder. When we read novels, watch movies, listen to music, look at paintings or watch burial services, we are immersed in a long line of imagination. If it is not for imagination, what inspired women to perform major strides full of trailblazers to fight for equality and to rise proudly side by side to their counterparts? Who would be brave enough to suggest an alternative to energy consumption other than coal and oil? If not for imagination, how could one take a quantum leap from the cold concrete world to a fantasy land inhabited by magical creatures and impacted millions of young minds? Human minds are created to be quite isolated from each other, therefore ideas and knowledge were sparsely distributed. Imagination overcame those constraints by exploiting culture, telling stories, performing rituals to provide cognitive anchors for ideas that have no natural home within the evolved mind. But it is linked into human culture to comprehend the occurrence of supernovas without seeing it in person. It is this linkage that leads to works of arts and science, which then become cornerstone for further knowledge exploration, then, making human history. The world needs to reimagine more than ever in the face of bleak realities. One must create an imagined world in order to understand the very real one we occupy. Imagine a better future, therefore requires keen and purposeful observation of the present. It is a mix of art and science. When the lost generation rekindles the flame of imagination, there is no telling how far we can go. Hence, the theme TEDxUKM 2022 Re: Imagine.
Re: Imagine, An Origin Story
1991 was a time of uncertainty. Thousands lost their shelters when George WH Bush ordered air attacks against Saddam Hussein’s troops. Global superpower, the Soviet Union announced a plan to dissolve and break up into independent nations. Things are not any better on Malaysia’s shore either. 1991 recorded the worst industrial disaster to date at Bright Sparklers Fireworks Factory in Sungai Buloh that killed 29 and injured 83 people. Our people were lost in haze literally and figuratively. We desperately needed something to grasp on in the strong current of reality. Wawasan 2020 (“Vision 2020”) struck the chord of every Malaysian. In the time of uncertainty, the vision imagined a prospering nation and its citizens with a well-fed belly. Back then, it promised what we wanted, thriving business, world class education and political stability. The aspiration was loudly echoed in the Malaysians' psyche because it symbolizes a beacon of hope and opportunities, a truly Malaysian dream. The adults imagined higher pays and not so tense bosses; the children imagined flying cars and rocket launchers. Talks about ways to improve the nation were ever so loudly resonated from the student’s essays to coffee shop speeches to Parliament debates. People in the street were all in high spirits and can’t wait to fast forward their time only to witness the greatness of the country we call Malaysia. 10 years on, the people come to realize that we might not manifest the aspiration in time. Well, Malaysians are historically patient and forgiving, of course, we sympathize with the recent economic recession.20 years on, the reality began to unfold a distasteful fact no one wants to admit. 30 years on, Wawasan 2020 no longer stays on the horizon when people are struggling to catch their economic lifeboats in the time of uncertainty. Politics, social wellbeing and scientific solutions no longer stay in the lexicon of daily conversations. It is fair to conclude, the vision never materialises, together the imagination faded away.
When the COVID-19 landed on the global nation, it hits our shores so badly that small business owner ceases to continue, government switches hand more than we can count, people seeks and losses jobs only to have enough food on table, depression begin crawling onto the isolated people and student taking a two year detour from their studies. And we don’t know when it is going to end. Malaysians are inherently proud of their resiliency despite tough times, we do not usually ask for relief or government support. That too took a hit, when the striking cold wind threatens the lives of our children and loved ones. We swallowed our pride and surrendered, raising torn clothes as white flags asking solidarity from co-workers, landlords and neighbours. Most important of all, we lost our ability to imagine.
This year, TEDxUKM serves to revive, rekindle the spirit of imagination and re-imagination. Reimagination is an opportunity to think of new solutions and ideas with no boundaries; to amend, to redefine, to reform; to remedy; to revisit and to reimagine a future for future generations. Perhaps it’s flying cars and robotic dogs, or perhaps it’s not, it is up to us, the imagineers. Now, it is high time to re-imagine our ideas: What does it mean to be a Malaysian? How can we have holistic growth in the nation? What are the scientific methods in promoting progressiveness? We need to address the past in order to reimagine a better future. Imagination requires meticulousness to tiny detail; and enormous courage to acknowledge what we did wrong. Hence, we ought to Re: Imagine.
Dewan Canselor Tun Abdul Razak (DECTAR)
Bangi, Selangor, 43600
Malaysia
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