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Once, they crossed swords. Now ...
MM Lee cajoles former colleagues to take photos
05:55 AM Sep 09, 2009
by Leong Wee Keat
THE book launch was over but before the guests could start to leave, the master of ceremonies asked them to stay back: Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew wanted to say "hello" to his former parliamentary colleagues.
Warm handshakes followed and, at one point, Mr Lee even cajoled some of them to take photographs with him.
"Come," said Mr Lee in Mandarin to ex-legislators who once filled the back-benches of the chamber - men who once provided the fiercest opposition to Mr Lee when they split from the People's Action Party.
Yesterday, the likes of former Barisan Socialis leader Fong Swee Suan and former leftist Chen Say Jame stepped forward and joined Mr Lee before the cameras.
And as the flashes and shutters went off, applause also rang out in the chamber.
That was the scene - decades after they last crossed swords in the legislature - at the Old Parliament House, in a re-union for some 150 past and present PAP members.
Gathered for the launch of the book Men in White - which tells of the untold stories inside the ruling party - many saw the event as an opportunity to catch up with old friends.
Mr Chen, an early PAP member and leftist unionist, said he last met his parliamentary colleagues decades ago. When asked about his photo moment with Mr Lee, the 77-year-old chuckled in Mandarin: "I'm just an ordinary person. He went on to be the Prime Minister."
The inclusion of left-wing voices was a key feature of the 692-page book - written by Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) journalists Sonny Yap, Richard Lim and Leong Weng Kam - in the retelling of key events in the PAP.
This inclusion, said Mr Lim Chin Joo - the younger brother of former PAP assemblymen Lim Chin Siong, who quit the party and formed Barisan Socialis - made the book comprehensive.
Now 72, Mr Lim, who spent nine years in detention for his left-wing activities, hopes the book could be the catalyst for more books charting Singapore's early political history. "I hope that the atmosphere will change and that others will soon follow in making their voices heard," he said.
SPH chairman and former Deputy Prime Minister Tony Tan said Men in White told the story of the ruling party through its former stalwarts, grassroots activists and their adversaries.
"Without their inputs, the PAP story would be incomplete and unbalanced. The result is a story of the PAP with its warts, blemishes and all," said Dr Tan.
Mr Fong, 78, a PAP founding member who helped lead the split in the party, said the stories of modern Singapore and PAP "are intertwined".
"The important thing is to inspire others, such as the younger ones, and let them know about Singapore's political history and how we have gotten here," he added.
Dr Tan echoed this in his speech earlier when he said: "This huge project will not be in vain if the book helps to equip a new generation of readers to rethink the Singapore Story, overturn some long standing assumptions, question some conventional wisdom and debunk some myths and taboos."
URL http://www.todayonline.com/Singapore/EDC090909-0000107/Once,-they-crossed-swords,-Now-,,,
Copyright 2009 MediaCorp Pte Ltd | All Rights Reserved
Once, they crossed swords. Now ...
MM Lee cajoles former colleagues to take photos
05:55 AM Sep 09, 2009
by Leong Wee Keat
THE book launch was over but before the guests could start to leave, the master of ceremonies asked them to stay back: Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew wanted to say "hello" to his former parliamentary colleagues.
Warm handshakes followed and, at one point, Mr Lee even cajoled some of them to take photographs with him.
"Come," said Mr Lee in Mandarin to ex-legislators who once filled the back-benches of the chamber - men who once provided the fiercest opposition to Mr Lee when they split from the People's Action Party.
Yesterday, the likes of former Barisan Socialis leader Fong Swee Suan and former leftist Chen Say Jame stepped forward and joined Mr Lee before the cameras.
And as the flashes and shutters went off, applause also rang out in the chamber.
That was the scene - decades after they last crossed swords in the legislature - at the Old Parliament House, in a re-union for some 150 past and present PAP members.
Gathered for the launch of the book Men in White - which tells of the untold stories inside the ruling party - many saw the event as an opportunity to catch up with old friends.
Mr Chen, an early PAP member and leftist unionist, said he last met his parliamentary colleagues decades ago. When asked about his photo moment with Mr Lee, the 77-year-old chuckled in Mandarin: "I'm just an ordinary person. He went on to be the Prime Minister."
The inclusion of left-wing voices was a key feature of the 692-page book - written by Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) journalists Sonny Yap, Richard Lim and Leong Weng Kam - in the retelling of key events in the PAP.
This inclusion, said Mr Lim Chin Joo - the younger brother of former PAP assemblymen Lim Chin Siong, who quit the party and formed Barisan Socialis - made the book comprehensive.
Now 72, Mr Lim, who spent nine years in detention for his left-wing activities, hopes the book could be the catalyst for more books charting Singapore's early political history. "I hope that the atmosphere will change and that others will soon follow in making their voices heard," he said.
SPH chairman and former Deputy Prime Minister Tony Tan said Men in White told the story of the ruling party through its former stalwarts, grassroots activists and their adversaries.
"Without their inputs, the PAP story would be incomplete and unbalanced. The result is a story of the PAP with its warts, blemishes and all," said Dr Tan.
Mr Fong, 78, a PAP founding member who helped lead the split in the party, said the stories of modern Singapore and PAP "are intertwined".
"The important thing is to inspire others, such as the younger ones, and let them know about Singapore's political history and how we have gotten here," he added.
Dr Tan echoed this in his speech earlier when he said: "This huge project will not be in vain if the book helps to equip a new generation of readers to rethink the Singapore Story, overturn some long standing assumptions, question some conventional wisdom and debunk some myths and taboos."
URL http://www.todayonline.com/Singapore/EDC090909-0000107/Once,-they-crossed-swords,-Now-,,,
Copyright 2009 MediaCorp Pte Ltd | All Rights Reserved