Category: Singapuraku

  • Osman Sulaiman Dilantik Setiausaha Agung Persatuan Belia MOTIVASI

    Osman Sulaiman Dilantik Setiausaha Agung Persatuan Belia MOTIVASI

    Persatuan Belia MOTIVASI telah memilih sdra Osman Sulaiman sebagai Setiausaha Agung nya yang baru.

    Persatuan Belia MOTIVASI yang berdaftar dengan Pendaftaran Persatuan (ROS) sejak tahun 1993 yang bergerak aktif dengan program-program khas untuk belia  dan isu-isu masyarakat amnya. MOTIVASI yang pernah berkerjasama dengan badan-badan Islam dan masjid-masjid Singapura sebagai contoh PERTAPIS, Masjid Ar-Rhaudah, Masjid Kassim dan lain-lain.

    Program-program yang telah MOTIVASI laksanakan adalah seperti Kelas Tuisyen Percuma, membantu belia dalam kes-kes mahkamah (juvenile delinquency), mengadakan pertandingan bolasepak, acara-acara sukan, Konvensyen Belia dengan penglibatan masyarakat dalam isu-isu semasa dan sebagainya.

    MOTIVASI juga telah bersama dalam program YMS (Young Muslim Secretariat), Belia Dunia Melayu Dunia Islam (DMDI), WAY (World Assembly Of Youth) yang memberi ahli-ahlinya kemahiran dan kematangan dalam kepimpinan.

    Integrasi kaum dan kerjasama diantara NGOs, CCs dan masjid-masjid dalam projek ‘Belia Jaya’ adalah diantara usaha MOTIVASI pelopori bagi keharmonian kaum dan kemakmuran masyarakat Singapura.

    Justeru itu usaha untuk mendekati belia dan masyarakat dipergiatkan bagi meneruskan usaha murni ini dengan motto MOTIVASI ‘Kejayaan Melalui Perpaduan’ (Success Through Unity). Untuk pertanyaan, penyertaan dan keahlian emel [email protected].

     

    Source: http://singapurakita.bravejournal.com

  • Malay Weddings Don’t Cost $50 And Other Facts About Malay Culture By Hidayah Amin

    Malay Weddings Don’t Cost $50 And Other Facts About Malay Culture By Hidayah Amin

    ADA pelbagai buku tentang budaya dan warisan Melayu dalam bahasa ibunda tetapi hanya segelintir dalam bahasa Inggeris.

    Atas dasar itu, penulis buku, Cik Hidayah Amin, merasakan sudah tiba masanya untuk mencetak buku, Malay Weddings Don’t Cost $50 And Other Facts About Malay Culture (Majlis Perkahwinan Melayu Tidak Berharga $50 dan Fakta-fakta Lain tentang Budaya Melayu).

    Malay Weddings Don't Cost $50 and Other Facts About Malay Culture

    Beliau, lulusan sarjana sejarah Universiti Cambridge, pernah menulis sebanyak 47 rencana mengenai budaya dan warisan Melayu di blog ‘Let’s Lepak’ bagi satu laman web milik Yayasan Antarabangsa Singapura (SIF), www.singaporekopitiam.sg.

    Maklum balas positif yang diterimanya mendorong beliau membukukan rencana lama dan baru itu selepas laman web tersebut tidak lagi aktif.

    Buku itu hasil syarikat penerbitan Cik Hidayah, Helang Books, merangkumi 42 rencana yang memberi panduan tentang budaya dan warisan, gaya hidup dan persona Melayu.

    Bagi mempersiapkan buku itu, Cik Hidayah telah memilih dan membuat kajian tentang satu senarai topik yang luas termasuk satu bibliografi.

    Antara topik dalam buku itu ialah When Visiting a Malay Home (adat istiadat semasa mengunjungi sebuah rumah orang Melayu); Khatan – The Journey from Boyhood to Manhood (amalan khatan); dan Potong Andam (adat mengetahui dara atau bukan).

    “Penulisan saya membolehkan pembaca mudah mencerna maklumat padat dan seronok dibaca,” kata Cik Hidayah.

    Katanya lagi, beliau juga mahu setiap esei dipadankan dengan gambar-gambar yang relevan untuk meningkatkan pembelajaran pembaca.

    Justeru, selain mencetak gambar koleksinya, beliau telah mendapatkan beberapa gambar daripada kawan dan anggota keluarga.

    Beliau juga telah membelanjakan sekitar $620 untuk membeli gambar luar biasa dan mendapatkan khidmat seorang pelukis ilustrasi untuk menghasilkan beberapa ilustrasi.

    Selain itu, beliau juga telah membayar hak cipta untuk menerbitkan lima setem dalam bukunya kepada Muzium Filatelik Singapura.

    “Buku ini ialah satu projek gotong-royong. Kawan-kawan menolong dengan membaca draf, mengambil atau meminjam gambar-gambar untuk buku, memberi sokongan moral, menyumbang tenaga di pelancaran buku dan sebagainya,” ujar Cik Hidayah.

    Bagi memastikan agar kandungan buku itu jelas difahami buat pembaca bangsa asing, beliau telah bekerja sama dengan seorang bangsa Cina yang menyunting buku itu.

    Sebelum ini, beliau pernah menulis buku koleksi 28 cerita tentang kehidupan keluarganya di rumah pusaka keluarga, Gedung Kuning, dari 1850-an hingga 1999.

    Buku Gedung Kuning: Memories of a Malay Childhood diterbitkan pada 2010.

    Beliau juga telah menerbitkan sebuah buku kanak-kanak berbahasa Inggeris berjudul The Mango Tree (Pokok Mangga Itu) pada tahun lalu.

    Ia satu-satunya buku kanak-kanak yang terpilih dalam senarai kategori bukan fiksyen berbahasa Inggeris bagi Hadiah Sastera Singapura (Singapore Literature Prize) tahun ini.

    Namun, Cik Hidayah menghadapi beberapa rintangan semasa menulis buku itu, antaranya kegagalannnya mendapatkan dana daripada pihak-pihak berkenaan kerana menurut pihak yang dimohon, beliau menulis adat istiadat yang tidak lagi diamalkan dan beliau menulis tentang pengalaman hidupnya di luar negara, selain menulis dalam bahasa Inggeris dan bukan Melayu.

    Namun, beliau tidak berputus asa.

    Akhirnya, beliau mendapat Geran Penyertaan Warisan (HPG) daripada Lembaga Warisan Negara (NHB) untuk mendapat subsidi bagi kos penerbitan.

    Beliau juga mengalami cabaran lain yang melengahkan jadual melengkapkan buku itu, antaranya, editor buku terpaksa menjalani pembedahan kecemasan dan rawatan, manakala pereka grafik, Masturah Sha’ari daripada Maya Gallery, perlu berpindah ke pejabat baru.

    Kini, Cik Hidayah, yang bakal menghasilkan buku kanak-kanak kedua, Mina Meets Cambridge, sedang membuat kajian untuk buku-buku tentang Kampong Gelam dan Kampong Tempe, berharap penulis dan penerbit tempatan mendapat sokongan.

    Nota: Buku Malay Weddings Don’t Cost $50 And Other Facts About Malay Culture boleh dibeli di semua gedung buku utama Singapura dan Malaysia pada harga $29.90.

  • SDP Questions The Singapore Education System

    SDP Questions The Singapore Education System

    As this article is published, thousands of pupils would have gone back to school to collect their PSLE results. Some students will celebrate; others will be in tears, crushed in spirit.

    What sort of system inflicts such travesty on 12-year-olds? What sort of education do we have that treats academic performance like a trophy sport: Glory in victory and agony in defeat?

    What values are we imparting to young minds? What happens to the self-esteem and the sense of self-worth when he or she discovers that she is only a ‘Normal’ or ‘Technical’ student?

    And then they can streamed to ‘elite’ or ‘neighbourhood’ schools. The really ‘smart’ ones, who are usually also the richer ones, get extra help in independent schools and gifted programmes.

    A radio DJ yesterday had to sound this caution to pupils: “Whatever score you get, your parents love you.” What kind of society have we built where our children have to be reminded that their score in one exam does not mean that their parents hate them?

    If they don’t do well who have they let down? Themselves? Their parents? The Government?

    This subject is not just a theoretical one, good only for an academic discussion. It affects real lives:

    • 22% of Singaporean children between 6-12 yrs thought of killing themselves. (ST, Jan 2014) Sadly, many actually carry out the act.
    • The no. of children warded for “aggressive, suicidal or hallucination tendencies” at IMH jumped by 35% between 2005-2010. Mental health professionals attribute these problems to academic stress. (CNA, 2 Feb 2013)
    • One in three students say they sometimes think that life is not worth living because of the fear of exams. (FEER, August 2001)

    We must stop doing this to our children. It is not good for them, it is not good for parents, and it is not good for the future of our country. In its place, we must device a system when we educate our children to be creative, compassionate and intelligent members of society with self-confidence and a strong sense of self-worth.

    There are a few ways that we can do this and they are spelt out under the SDP education policy titled Educating For Creativity and Equality:

    1. Remove PSLE. As pointed out, the stress of exams inflict horrific psychological trauma on our children. What’s more, it is not an intelligent approach to assess the abilities of primary-school students on a single exam.

    2. Cultivate creative minds. Build confidence in children by helping them adopt an attitude of independent thinking, willingness to make mistakes, and persevere in the face of failed attempts.

    3. Reduce syllabus, broaden curriculum. The syllabi for existing subjects will be reduced while subjects such as music appreciation, speech and drama, literature, etc. as well as periods for students to collaborate and interact to develop creativity will be introduced to provide a well-rounded curriculum.

    4. Reduce class size. The SDP will reduce class size in our schools to 20 pupils/class from the current 40 to provide students the individual attention they need to succeed.

    5. Scrap school and class ranking. Comparing exam results and ranking students and classes will detract from the real purpose of education which is self-improvement and self-actualisation.

    To read the full paper with other proposals, click here.

     

    Source: http://yoursdp.org

  • PAP MP Lim Biow Chuan Wrote Formal Letter To Encourage Daughter

    PAP MP Lim Biow Chuan Wrote Formal Letter To Encourage Daughter

    So what happens when you put a man with a strong faith and Facebook together? Well you get this.

    On Nov. 19, 2014, Lim put up on Facebook a picture of a letter he wrote last year to encourage his daughter who was going to receive her PSLE results

    Besides showing that he is a God-fearing doting father, he is rather formal, because how many people actually types out a letter to their kid?

    Regardless, for those of you who also want to write something sweet to your offspring but are too tired or lazy or because you are not much of a professional letter writer, you can copy and paste the text below, which is Lim’s letter. Do remember to change the date and name to suit your circumstances.

    You’re welcome.

    ——

    21 November 2013

    My dearest Rebecca,

    LETTER FROM YOUR FATHER

    Tomorrow the PSLE results will be announced. This last week has been a period of anxiety for myself and your mother as we worry about things which we should not be worrying about. If we have been harsh or impatient with you during these last few weeks, I apologise for we should have known better as your parents.

    Regardless of how you perform in your PSLE exams, I want to assure you that you are precious to me and to God. You have always been kind, compassionate and helpful to others, I still recall how you asked me to bring you for the wake of a schoolmate when her mother passed away last year. You have always been wanting to stand up for your classmates who have been bullied.

    Good grades are not the most important thing in life. What is very important to me is your character. I want to encourage you to lead your life in an upright manner — hardworking, honest, respectful, humble, loyal and willing to help others. I hope to see my daughter grow up as someone who loves God (just as God loves you) and someone who hold God in awe.

    It is important to be hardworking and to aspire to do your best in your endeavours. In all that you do, put in your best efforts. None of us would ever lead our lives without any mistakes. When you fumble or make mistakes in life, acknowledge your errors and learn from the mistake so that you can improve. Do not ever look down on yourself or allow anyone to look down on you. You will always be unique and have your own gifts and talent which God has given to you.

    As I had said to your elder sister, honor and love your mother, your sister and your family. We will always be closest to you and will be there to support and encourage you all the time.

    You are dearly treasured as my daughter. I am proud to be your father and to be called your dad.

    With love,
    Daddy

     

    Editor’s note: The number of Facebook Likes on his name card was exaggerated. During GE2011, he had only a few hundred fans. The 23,172 Likes was supposed to reflect the number of fans he hopes to get. He currently has 1,915 Likes.

     

    Source: http://mothership.sg

  • Security Guard On Probation For Having Sex With 13 Year Old Girl

    Security Guard On Probation For Having Sex With 13 Year Old Girl

    A former security guard was placed on probation for 15 months on Thursday after he admitted having sex with a 13-year-old girl who had run away from home.

    Muhammad Rohaizad Muhammad Razali, 20, is the third of four men to be dealt with for having sex with the minor, who fell pregnant and had to have an abortion.

    He befriended her on Facebook and asked her to be his girlfriend. She agreed and they had sex six times over the next month at a HDB staircase landing.

    He pleaded guilty to two of six offences committed between Feb 8 and March 8 and said he did not use protection on either occasion.

    Muhammad Rohaiza was also ordered to perform 120 hours of community service and remain indoors between 10pm and 6am. His parents have to sign a $5,000 bond to ensure his good behaviour.

    The court heard that during his month-long relationship with the girl, who is now 14, Muhammad Rohaizad would meet her almost every day near his home in Yishun. All of their sexual encounters took place in the staircase landing of a HDB block there.

    Musa Ahmad, 23, and Muhammad Nur Hakim Abdullah, 21 – who were dealt with previously – each received a year in jail.

    A fourth man, Muhammad Sharul Shah Saruwan, 20, will be sentenced on Dec 24.

    The maximum penalty for having sex with a person under 16 is 10 years in jail and a fine.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com