IS CALLING IT THE
"GREEN WAVE" A FORM OF CLOSET ISLAMOPHOBIA?
We must
revisit what happened immediately after GE15 in 2022 because we cannot afford
to let history repeat itself. Millions of Malaysian voters - who went to the
ballot box with hope and clear principles - found themselves outmaneuvered by
political leaders whose primary hunger was for power.
When
politicians readily compromise on their own core promises and manipulate public
sentiment just to secure office, citizens must look back and dissect how it was
done. Understanding the birth of the "Green Wave" myth is essential
if we want to protect our democratic choices from being weaponized against us
in the future.
Immediately
after that election, I wrote that what Malaysia had witnessed was not a
"Green Wave." I still hold that view today.
To
understand why, we must look at what happened before Malaysians went to
the polling stations during GE15.
For
months leading up to the election, something remarkable was taking place. For
the first time in decades, Malaysians from every race, religion, and background
were talking about one issue above all else: corruption.
This
conversation did not originate from politicians. It came from civil society,
ordinary citizens, and religious organizations. One of the most significant
efforts was led by #RasuahBusters through its Satu Jari campaign.
Together with hundreds of NGOs, community organizations, and concerned
citizens, they successfully pushed integrity and anti-corruption to the top of
the national agenda.
The
message cut across all faiths:
- In mosques: Friday sermons frequently
reminded Muslims that corruption is a betrayal of amanah (trust).
- In churches: Sermons spoke about
integrity and the moral responsibility to reject corrupt practices.
- In temples and gurdwaras: Buddhist, Hindu, Sikh, and
Taoist communities drew upon their own scriptures to emphasize honesty,
justice, and ethical leadership.
Something
extraordinary had happened. Malaysia was not united by ethnicity; we were
united by values.
Every
community expressed that conviction through their own lens. Muslims opposed
corruption because they wanted to be good Muslims. Christians opposed it
because they wanted to be good Christians. Buddhists, Hindus, Sikhs, and
Taoists did exactly the same to live up to their own spiritual teachings.
Different
faiths. Different languages. One moral conclusion.
That is
why I argued then - and still argue now - that GE15 was not a Green Wave. It
was a Red, White, Blue and Yellow Malaysian Wave. It was millions of
citizens arriving at the exact same ethical destination through different
spiritual paths.
The Architecture of a Distraction
Then,
almost immediately after the election, the national conversation was hijacked.
The profound focus on corruption and integrity vanished overnight. A new label
began to dominate the media and political commentary: the "Green
Wave."
The
person or group of persons who coined and popularized this term did a massive
disservice - not just to Islam, but to the entire nation.
Malaysians
are smart enough to look past the surface and ask: why was this label
manufactured in the first place? What was the true intent behind it?
When we
analyze the immediate aftermath of GE15, two political motivations become
clear:
First,
certain political actors realized a terrifying truth: if cross-cultural values,
integrity, and anti-corruption became the primary drivers for voters, the old
political playbook was dead. For decades, many had depended entirely on race
and religious division to maintain power. A united Malaysian population voting
on shared ethical principles meant these parties would lose their grip on the
electorate. They needed to force the conversation back into the familiar
territory of fear and identity politics.
Second,
the label provided a convenient, manufactured crisis. In the post-election
scramble for power, certain factions needed a powerful justification to go back
on their solemn campaign promises. Just days prior, they were loudly
campaigning against corruption and promising never to work with certain
figures. Yet, suddenly, they were "buddy-buddy" and forming a
government together.
To hide
this hypocrisy, they needed an imaginary monster. By inventing and stoking the
fear of a looming "Green Wave," they created the perfect pretext to
justify their sudden political realignment. It allowed them to pretend they
were saving the country, when in reality, they were simply securing power.
Let me be
absolutely clear: I am not a member of any political party, and I am certainly
not a member of PAS. But we must realize that when political opponents attack
PAS by weaponizing Islam and using loaded terms like "Green Wave," it
triggers a dangerous chain reaction. It distorts how non-Muslims view Islam,
and it inevitably provokes a defensive reaction from Muslims who feel their
faith is being demonized.
This is
incredibly damaging for a nation like ours. If we want to build a Malaysia that
genuinely accepts diversity, finds compromise, and seeks ways to harmonize our
different religious beliefs and ethnic backgrounds, this calculated
polarization must stop. When leaders pretend to forget their own principles and
manufacture fear to cover their tracks, it reveals a profound lack of
integrity. These are the maneuvers that should make citizens deeply cautious
about the leadership we trust.
The Impact of the Label
Once the
election results were successfully framed as a Green Wave, the story was no
longer about millions of Malaysians rejecting corruption. Instead, attention
was forced onto one community, one religion, and one color. The narrative moved
from shared values back to identity politics. From unity back to division.
Public
discussion stopped asking why Malaysians had united against corruption and
instead began debating whether this "Green Wave" was something to be
feared.
This
double standard remains deeply troubling:
- If Christians vote against
corruption based on Christian values, nobody calls it a "Christian
Wave."
- If Buddhists vote against
corruption based on Buddhist values, nobody calls it a "Buddhist
Wave."
- If Hindus or Sikhs vote
based on their teachings, nobody labels it a "Hindu or Sikh
Wave."
So why,
when Muslims vote according to Islamic values against corruption, does it
suddenly get labeled a "Green Wave"? Were they not simply trying to
be good Muslims, just as others were trying to be faithful to the moral
teachings of their own traditions?
When a
political label repeatedly associates a democratic choice with a color strongly
identified with Islam - and frames that choice as an existential threat - does
it merely describe reality? Or does it actively encourage people to associate
Islam with fear?
That is
why I ask whether calling GE15 the "Green Wave" became a form of closet
Islamophobia.
I am not
suggesting that every person who uses the term intends it maliciously. But the effect
of the term is undeniable: it shifts the public consciousness away from a
cross-cultural rejection of corruption and replaces it with suspicion toward
one religious community.
Malaysia
deserves better than this lazy, divisive framing. Our greatest achievement in
GE15 was not which coalition won or lost. It was that, for a brief moment,
Malaysians from every race and faith found common moral ground.
That is
the wave we should choose to remember.
Peace,
Anas
Zubedy
Penang