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Marina Mahathir

Daughter of Malaysian Prime Minister From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marina Mahathir
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Datin Paduka Marina binti Tun Dr. Mahathir (born 11 May 1957)[1] (Jawi: مرينة بنت محاضر) is a Malaysian socio-political activist and writer. She is the eldest child of the 4th and 7th Prime Minister of Malaysia, Mahathir Mohamad and Siti Hasmah Mohamad Ali.[2] She graduated from the University of Sussex.

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Career

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The photo taken one month after Marina was born in June 1957

Marina is a dynamic leader in many non-governmental organizations such as the Malaysian AIDS Foundation and is an active socio-political blogger. She also writes in her bi-weekly column called Musings in The Star newspaper since 1989.[3] Some of her pieces in the column have been published in her books such as 50 Days: Rantings by MM, published in 1997 and Telling It Straight, published in 2012 by Editions Didier Millet.[3] The latter is a selection of her articles published in her column between 2003 and 2012. It includes a foreword by Dr Farish A. Noor, a local political scientist and historian. It contains 90 articles which are written thematically including a special written introduction on the topics discussed in the book. It also includes two previously unpublished articles.[4]

She is an active campaigner for women's rights. In 2006 she has described the status of Muslim women in Malaysia as similar to that of the Black South Africans under apartheid.[citation needed]

Marina has called for an end to discrimination based on sexual orientations in 1998 and 1999.[5]

She had appeared in Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad's Documentary released in late 2009 with the rest of the members of the Mahathir Family.[citation needed]

In 2010, she was awarded UN Person of The Year for her volunteer work in combatting HIV/AIDS.[6]

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On 28 August 2012, Marina (Left), Hisham Hussein, Chairman of PT Foundation (Middle) and Ambassador of Japan to Malaysia H.E. Shigeru Nakamura (Right)

In 2016 Marina denounced the destruction of Malaysian culture and traditions by what she perceives as 'Arab colonialism'.[7]

In January 2018, following a viral incident of a Muslim man slapping a Muslim woman for not wearing a hijab, Marina warned that Islamization of Malaysia will tear the country apart. She referred to Islamization as "another form of colonisation, a concept that has never been known to being non-violent".[8]

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Personal life

On 7 June 1998 Marina married Tara Sosrowardoyo, a renowned Indonesian photographer. They have two daughters and a son.[9][10]

Previously, she was married to Didier Roussille, a Frenchman. Marina and Didier have a daughter, Ineza Roussille.

Bibliography

  • 50 days : Rantings, ZI Publications Sdn. Bhd, 2009. ISBN 9789675266003
  • Hidden voices : true Malaysian experience of AIDS, as editor, with Wan Zawawi Ibrahim, Malaysian AIDS Councils, 1999. ISBN 9834019211
  • In Liberal Doses, Star Publications, 1997. ISBN 978-9839950779
  • Eyes : a photographic journey through the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, with Rene Burbi and Leonard Lueras, Eyes on Asian, 1993. ISBN 0356044149
  • Telling It Straight, EDM Pte Ltd, 2012. ISBN 978-981-4385-29-9
  • The Apple and the Tree: Life as Dr Mahathir's Daughter, Penguin Books, 2021. ISBN 9789-8149-5422-8

Awards and accolades

Honours of Malaysia

Foreign honours

In 2016, Marina was conferred the Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur by the French government for “her voice and charisma to many causes”, citing her work with the Malaysian AIDS Council and with migrants as examples.[12] Marina became one of eight Malaysians to receive the award so far.[2]

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See also

References

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