BUY.....The original cheque used to buy over Alaska
By : DANIEL JOHN JAMBUN
TWO BN leaders, namely Datuk
Yahya Hussein and Datuk Donald Mojuntin thought they had a good point when they
said that we shouldn’t be too fussy about the date of our National Day, that
celebrating it on August 31 shouldn’t be made an issue because it is not that
important. Yahya had said that a good example is Alaska and Hawaii who joined
the United States but never made a fuss about their national day or
independence day.
But several facts about
history beg repeating to get a clear perspective of Yahya’s argument. First,
Sabah was not annexed into the Malaysian Federation like Hawaii was. Sabah,
after becoming an independent nation for two weeks, teamed up with Singapore,
Sarawak and Malaya to form a federation called Malaysia – as equal partners –
on September 16, 1963.
When Sabah formed Malaysia
with the other partners, there was no Malaysia yet, unlike the case with Alaska
which was acquired by the USA in 1867, 91n years after the independence of the
13 United States of America from Great Britain in 1776. Hawaii was annexed into
the USA in 1898, 122 years after 1774.
For the education of Yahya
and Mojuntin, Alaska did not even ‘join’ the United States. It was bought by
the USA from the Russian Empire for USD7.2 million Russia, fearing a war with
Britain that would allow the British to seize Alaska, wanted to proceed with
the sale.
Being a commodity which was
the object of sales and purchase, Alaska cannot in any sense claim to have a
proper national day, or least of all, an independence day of its own, because
in reality it didn’t get any sort of independence when it joined the US. In the
case of Hawaii, the state was forcibly robbed from the hands of the powerless
Hawaiian monarchy.
Teri Sforza werites that in
Hawaii’s case “It's a story of money, power and betrayal. Hawaii was a proud
and independent nation when Capt. James Cook [came] in 1778. Hawaiians had run
their own affairs for some 2,000 years. The kingdom signed trade and peace
treaties with the United States, England and other foreign nations, each
recognizing Hawaii's independence.
Flocks of American
missionaries began arriving from Boston in 1820 and were welcomed warmly; many
decided to stay on the islands rather than return to the frigid Northeast.
Their new roots in paradise went deep: The missionaries became powerful sugar
planters and politicians, often serving as advisers to the king. The monarchy
was weakened. The planters' powers were strengthened. The United States was the
biggest market for Hawaii's sugar.
The transplanted planters
longed for Hawaii to become part of the United States so they wouldn't have to
worry about tariffs. The U.S. minister to Hawaii, John L. Stevens, was anxious
to annex the islands as well. Sensing this, Queen Liliuokalani was on the verge
of imposing a new Constitution shifting power back to the monarchy - but she
never got the chance. On Jan. 16, 1893, U.S. Marines landed in Honolulu armed
with Howitzer cannons and carbines.
A group of 18 men - mostly
American sugar farmers - staged a coup, proclaiming themselves the ‘provisional
government’ of Hawaii. Stevens gave immediate recognition to them as Hawaii's
true government. Imprisoned in Iolani Palace, Queen Liliuokalani issued a
statement: ‘I yield to the superior force of the United States of America, whose
minister, his excellency John L. Stevens, has caused United States troops to be
landed at Honolulu.
Now, to avoid any collision
of armed forces and perhaps the loss of life, I do, under this protest, and
impelled by said force, yield my authority until such time as the government of
the United States shall undo the action of its representative and reinstate me.
The monarchy’s power was
never reinstated until today. So, Datuk Yahya, note that Hawaii did not gain
independence by ‘joining’ America because it was annexed (forced to join) and
thus LOST its independence. So how on earth can anyone compare Sabah’s history
of together forming Malaysia and Alaska being bought and Hawaii being forced to
join a nation?
I hope with this knowledge,
the BN leaders can stop trying to fool Sabahans by using Alaska and Hawaii to
justify the neglect of Sabah’s demand for the recognition of September 16 as
our common Malaysia Day.
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