academy
Esteemed political scientist Professor Emeritus Dato’ K.J.Ratnam passes away
Malaysia’s academic community mourns the loss of Professor Emeritus Dato’ K.J. Ratnam, Foundation Dean at USM’s School of Comparative Social Sciences and ex-Dean at the University of Singapore’s Faculty of Social Sciences.
KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s academic community is mourning the demise of Professor Emeritus Dato’ K.J. Ratnam, who passed away on Sunday (10 March).
Prof Ratnam, a distinguished political scientist and analyst specializing in Malaysian politics and ethnic relations, leaves behind a legacy of numerous publications encompassing topics such as race relations, social science development, political sociology, education, R&D planning, and science and technology policy.
According to a poignant email shared within civil society circles, Prof Ratnam’s son, Kayan Ratnam, revealed that his father passed away on the night of 10 March in Kuala Lumpur.
“His pulse had been quite weak for the last few days,” Mr Kayan shared, “We had a doctor’s appointment scheduled for Monday but it wasn’t to be. ”
He recounted that his father was seated at the dining table, engrossed in reading on his computer when he suddenly slumped over.
“Our nurse found him like that and was unable to revive him, I arrived soon after with the ambulance but nothing could be done.”
Mr Kayan mentioned that his father passed away “doing something that gave him joy throughout life.”
Reportedly, Prof Ratnam had explicitly requested no religious rites and preferred a swift cremation.
Gutzy Asia had written to Prof Ratnam’s son to seek further details about the passing of his father.
Colleagues in Malaysia’s academic community lauded Prof Ratnam as a great and highly principled scholar.
Mohamad Abdullah, Deputy Registrar at the Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM), shared the news on Facebook with a heavy heart, stating that the university “has lost another prominent figure, a great and respected thinker in political science, who made significant contributions to the intellectual world.”
Prof Ratnam’s prolific research across varied disciplines
In a private conversation with faculty members, the late Lee Kuan Yew reportedly exempted the American professor of philosophy from his criticism of foreign staff members, emphasizing that he would not tolerate criticism of his government’s policies from teachers he considered “birds of passage.”
At the time, a spokesperson from the National University of Singapore (NUS) denied any significant exodus of foreign professors.
The spokesperson pointed out that despite nine faculty resignations in 1970, the university had hired 24 new foreign teachers. Additionally, the university’s faculty had increased from 280 members in 1968 to 316 in 1971.