
KUALA LUMPUR -- He has never sought glory, monetary gain or revenge. Standing on the dais at the end of the massive Bersih 4.0 rally (
bersih means clean in terms of elections and corruption), Hishamuddin Rais hardly looked like the chief organizer of this and many years of similar protests, a widely-published writer and inspiration to several generations of radical youth. With his trademark broad smile, black goatee, ponytail, crumpled cap and clam-digger pants barely hiding his knees, he could have been mistaken for an artist or street performer,
rather than the oft-imprisoned dissident described at one ruling party summit as "public enemy No. 1."