The candy-cane stripes mingle freely among the Saffron-clothed C moon and fourteen-handed star. They swim navy-like in the blue.
The reds and whites alternate Till the states are properly represented. They ask of nothing more, nothing more.
What does it hold? What does it teach us? The wild history of it roars and thunders Like a hurricane that never stops.
But it did. How did we overthrow Something so mighty, so white As an unstoppable hurricane?
And the purpose of it all? Freedom. Freedom and independence. Two righteous Morals so hard to obtain.
At what cost did we attain them? Bloodshed, shrieks, lies, torment and tears. It was all worth it, love, all of it.
When Jack finally crawled down the beanstalk, We never flew higher, braver or breezier With such dignity and unfaltering spirit.
We have come so far to this place, this place Where hatred shreds to little warm hearts and people Are just people no matter how colourful they are.
We’re a rare hybrid of ethics: the sarong-laden man milking the rubber tree Is no different than the blackened faces down in the tin mines And the ones that hand-built the train tracks, woody and sturdy.
Seven chants of it that fateful afternoon And we cried knowing, knowing we have made it. Toiled sweat never tasted sweeter. Merdeka!
Most of us laughed and rejoiced. Some were heard wailing and flying off to where They rightfully belong. We don’t want you here. We never did.
The dove’s free now, Free of thick metal bars That caged it for centuries and
It flies now, wings spread into A feathery horizon, windily flapping back and forth Into a new world, a new promise called Malaysia.