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Ceritalah | Meet Maya Karin, the Malaysian actress transformed from ‘Scream Queen’ to ‘Green Queen’

  • Earlier this month, she spontaneously posted a tweet imploring Indonesian President Joko Widodo to intervene to address the toxic haze. It went viral
  • Celebrity activism invites cynicism. However, in Malaysia and Indonesia, high-profile voices are needed to increase awareness and shape debate

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Maya Karin is frequently involved in community events focused on environmental conservation. Photo: Nadirah Zakariya/Team Ceritalah

Last week, 16-year-old activist Greta Thunberg inspired millions of young people to gather in cities around the world to protest against apathy and inaction in the face of climate change.

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The response in Southeast Asia, however, was tepid at best: demonstrators in Jakarta and Kuala Lumpur numbered in the hundreds, even as Indonesia and Malaysia endure suffocating smoke from forest fires.

Given the scale of the disruption – an assault on biodiversity as well as people’s general health – where is the public anger and outrage? Indeed, who should be blamed? Governments, the all-powerful palm oil corporations or the smallholders and farmers?

Environmental awareness in the region remains limited. However, a handful of individuals are doing their best to change the situation and actress Maya Karin – the half-German, half-Malay “Scream Queen” turned “Green Queen” – has emerged as one of the most prominent and committed advocates.

“I’ve always been a person that just goes with the flow,” she says. “My career has never been planned. I never had any ambitions or particular aims to be a celebrity.”

Earlier this month, she spontaneously posted a tweet imploring Indonesian President Joko Widodo to intervene to address the toxic haze, asking “shall we let greed prevail?” Her message went viral.

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Maya Karin taking a group picture with a group of volunteers during a conservation excursion. Photo: Nadirah Zakariya/Team Ceritalah
Maya Karin taking a group picture with a group of volunteers during a conservation excursion. Photo: Nadirah Zakariya/Team Ceritalah

Much of her activism has followed the same trajectory. The #MayaKarinChallenge impels people to submerge themselves in water to draw attention to the purity of Malaysian streams and rivers. The social media challenge was born of her taking a selfie while lying in a river on a trip back from the Belum rainforest in Perak, which was shared with her 1.4 million Twitter followers and 950,000 fans on Instagram.

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