Category: Sosial

  • Joshua Simon: What Is Racial Harmony?

    Joshua Simon: What Is Racial Harmony?

    I propose a challenge.

    Go to town. Ion, 313, Orchard Central, Wisma, Takashimaya – any mall in town. I want you to count how many Malay/Indian men and women featured on the posters.

    Ok now out of town. Wherever you go in Singapore now open your eyes to it and really count. On the bus. On the train. On the commercials before the movie starts. On the newspapers. On the magazines. On the tv commercials.

    Are you cool with that?

    Because it seems to me the ‘Singaporean Look’ is a skinny Chinese girl with long hair and a big smile! ☺️ Yay and her boyfrend smiling right behind chasing after her is a slim fit Chinese boy with straight hair and a big smile! Tee-hee!

    Are you cool with that? Seems to me we are. Coz if this was the US we’d bring this up and talk about it. Really, talk about it and fix it. But Josh this is Asia! And this is the Asian look! Ah, see that’s the problem right there.

    As a young kid growing up in Singapore, I’d never see someone of my skin color rocking ads and headlines unless it’s Singapore Idol Season. I couldn’t entertain my first ambition of being an actor coz every role (although said open to all races) would go to the man with the Singaporean Look.

    I do music, I do radio. I’m behind a microphone. If I had a dollar for every person that has come up to me saying “OMG I didn’t know you’re Indian!” I’d be able to afford a down payment for an HDB flat.In the industry, I’ve had peers get turned down gigs because they were too “ethic looking”. I don’t watch Channel 8 or Vasantham but… off the top of my head I can name you 10 Chinese local celebrities (includes Rui En). Is it just me?

    Maybe there isn’t enough talented Indian and Malay celebrities. Or maybe we’re not given a chance to see them.
    Who’s stopping them? Who’s saying no to these people? Who’s decided what the Singapore Look is?

    I’m not celebrating Racial Harmony in Singapore till I get my answers and see some change. It’s 2016. Do not get complacent. I represent the next generation that isn’t gonna just keep quiet and nod my head and say it’s all okay.

    Racial Harmony isn’t just about us getting along. It’s equal opportunities. Equal chances to shine. I wanna see diversity.

    I can smell the smoke and tell that something ain’t right. Now I wanna see people move. Share that spotlight.

     

    Source: Joshua Simon

  • You Don’t Need A Fortune To Be Fortunate

    You Don’t Need A Fortune To Be Fortunate

    Hi everyone, meet Mdm Ah Heng, 95 year old box collector from Kreta Ayer. Despite being the OLDEST box collector we’ve ever met in SIngapore, she is also one of the most cheerful and positive. And amazingly at 95, she’s still very agile and strong. Maybe what keeps her going strong is her positive energy. Although some may claim that it is because she keeps herself fit by “exercising”, we beg to differ because other box collectors too, “exercise” however, many of them shouldn’t be walking at all along dangerous roads if they are limping in pain due to their aging limbs. So it has to be her positive energy that keeps her strong.

    She speaks Cantonese and a tiny bit of Malay and I could barely understand what she’s telling me, but she never stops trying and she seems to enjoy talking a lot. She will walk a few metres and turn back and continue talking then walk away again and turn back and continue talking.

    One of the things that i can understand, she said was “Saya susah tapi saya tak nak susahkan orang.” (translated: I’m poor but I do not want to trouble others.) She says that in the most positive manner that she sounds like she’s thankful to even be alive and do not have anything to complain. She’s not married and do not have children and surviving on her own. What an amazing woman. Many of the box collectors we met, who are in their 70s and 80s could barely walk properly. But this lady was ever so lively and cheerful. We talked and talked all along standing by the side of a small road for almost half hour. She was so full of energy and very appreciative of the vouchers and meal coupons that we just gave her. We promised to meet her every month to continue paying forward her following months’ meals at the nearby Mixed Vegetable Stall at the coffeeshop of No.85 Keong Saik Rd.

    If you speak CANTONESE and you LOVE TO CHAT, why not PM us and we will intro you to her. You’ll have a great time chatting with this lady!

    Very special thanks to Stephanie for helping out with the distribution and helping explain to the box collectors on how to redeem the coupons. And thank you for your help stamping next month’s coupons.

    And also a very special thanks to everyone who contributed to our Monthly Meal Funds for the box collectors.

    “No One Can Do Everything But Everyone Can Do Something”

    #FreeRaif #IamRaifBadawi

     

    Source: Happy People Helping People Foundation

  • Muslimah Baker: Unfair That Company Discriminated Against Me Just Because I Wasn’t Chinese

    Muslimah Baker: Unfair That Company Discriminated Against Me Just Because I Wasn’t Chinese

    So this past Monday, 2 days ago, I went for a job interview at a well-known halal bakery for the position of a cake decorator. As some of you may know, I’ve been baking for the past couple of years, doing wedding cakes and deserts. I thought that this interview was a really great opportunity for me to continue pursuing what I love.

    The interview with HR went well. We had a great chat, talked about the baking industry, and discussed the role that was being offered so on and so forth. After looking at my portfolio she was keen to move things forward, and so was I. She shuffled up and down the office, making phone calls to coordinate a last minute meeting with the head of the baking department, who was 5 floors above the HR office. I waited for about 15 minutes for the head of the department, and at that point was really looking forward to meeting him. The HR rep then sat me down in a another meeting room next to the waiting room. These two rooms were separated by a glass panel, so you could clearly see what was going on outside.

    So the head of the department arrived with one of his colleagues. I introduced myself to the both of them and we sat down to talk.
    He looked through my portfolio, flipping through the pages very haphazardly. After a few moments, he proceeded to asked me, “Can you coat a cake?”, to which I answered “Yes I can.”.

    Silence… Then he then said we could go up to the bakery so that I could do a demonstration. We stood to got up to proceed upstairs, but then he turned to me, gesturing his hands at me from head to toe and said,

    “From what I see, and the way you look, and not trying to be racist ah, but you Malay, I think you cannot la”

    I was stunned and I just froze. I felt my ears getting a little hot, but I didn’t want to lose my cool. I was taken aback and didn’t quite know how to respond anyway. I just kept quiet because I was shocked. He continued,

    “You know ah, Malays ah they over promise, promise I can do this I can do that, in the end, cannot make it, after 2 days disappear.”

    I answered him,

    “Sir, I haven’t promised you anything. I think you should give me a chance”

    By this point, I was extremely disgusted, angry and in total disbelief. He laughed again and said,

    “Ya ok ok, we will head upstairs and proceed, then we see where we can go from there? Anyways you speak Chinese not? Cos mostly all my worker speak Chinese”

    I answered that I didn’t speak the language but I could understand bits and pieces.

    ‘What the heck,’ I told myself. I had already come this far, I might as well finish this off and do this well for myself. We proceeded to the baking room where I was handed a bowl of frosting, a pallet knife, frosting bag, 4 layers of cake, and a scraper.

    The department head left and sent in another colleague to watch me. He couldn’t speak English well, so we had a hard time communicating.

    I asked him how he wanted the cake to be coated, to try to get a better sense of the technique required, to which he answered “Yes you coat, you coat”.

    So I coated the cake, clean with standard edges and finish. He motioned for me to scrape the edges with a zig zag scraper, so I did. It turned out fine, the edges were clean and I did the best that I could. Not a single crumb in sight, neatly combed.

    The department head returned, walking into the room, laughed while saying, “Aiyo cannot Llah”

    He started talking to his colleague in mandarin, thinking I would not understand him. From what he said I understood that I was actually supposed to be shown a sample cake that I was meant to recreate. “Ni mei you gei da kan sample ah?” Nope, he did not let me see a sample.

    At this point, I grabbed my bag, thanked them both for their time, took back the copies of my portfolio, and left.

    I have no intention of naming or shaming this organisation and its people, but I would like to highlight that racial discrimination in the job market is more real than we think. I’m making a stand and sharing my story because I believe in equal rights and equal opportunity for everyone. How can anyone judge another based on general racial stereotypes? In Singapore, of all places, a supposedly racially harmonious and fair country? Particularly in my case, what I thought was ironic as hell, was that this company actually prides itself on catering to the Muslim community.

    Are we going to start making this right or are we going to sweep it under the rug and just suck it up as “the way things are?”

    The point I’m trying to make is that nobody wants to be generalised or defined by racial stereotypes. Racial profiling is unfair and unjust. We are more than our skin. We are actions. We are people. We are human beings with original thought and different experiences that have shaped us to become unique individuals with so much potential to offer society and the world. And yet I find myself, for the first time, discriminated against and not given a real chance for something I’m confident at, for something that I know sets me apart. Nobody should ever be told that they can’t do something based on the colour of their skin, but the sad reality is that this is real, and this is really happening.

    Needless to say , I probably will never buy flour, cakes, pastes or anything from these people ever again. But I do wish them the best of luck maintaining their halal certification, and I do wonder how they will maintain their minimum Muslim employment quota.

     

    Source: Sarah Carmariah

  • China Businesses Taps Onto Global Halal Market, But Confused Over What Halal Really Means

    China Businesses Taps Onto Global Halal Market, But Confused Over What Halal Really Means

    QINGTONGXIA — The wine-swilling co-founder of Sai Wai Xiang Halal Foodstuff Co enjoys his pork and does not follow Islam, but still sells more than US$50 million (S$67.4 million) worth of food to Muslims across Asia and the Middle East.

    The company is at the forefront of a Chinese drive into the global halal food and beverage market, exporting as far away as Saudi Arabia.

    Businessman Deng Zhijun bills his wares as “products with Muslim ethnic flavour”, but has difficulty recalling some of Islam’s basic dietary tenets.

    “Muslims definitely don’t smoke and don’t drink alcohol,’ he said over a lunch at the company, in a garden lined with caged peacocks, macaws and chickens. “There’s also some kind of meat they don’t eat, but I forgot.”

    His half-knowledge is typical of China’s complicated relationship with Islam, which officially has more than 23 million adherents in the country. Some independent estimates put it as high as 50 million — which would put China among the world’s top 10 Muslim nations.

    Beijing’s officially atheist Communist authorities oscillate between tight restrictions and more liberal policies that are enforced unevenly.

    Mr Deng’s company is based in Ningxia, a western region a third of whose six million population are Hui. The group are a separate minority under Beijing’s classification policies even though most are essentially from the Han ethnic majority, differentiated only by being Muslims.

    Violence in Xinjiang, the homeland of the other main Muslim minority, the Uighurs, has killed hundreds, with Beijing attributing it to Islamic extremism and foreign influence, while activists blame draconian restrictions on religion and culture.

    In a promotional video playing at Sai Wai Xiang’s factory — set up 14 years ago — a table of happy Chinese diners clink glasses of beer before tucking into their meal.

    “Drinking red wine is very good for the body and has health benefits, just like eating halal food,” said Mr Deng, who recalled a recent trip to Bordeaux and said he often finishes a bottle of the local Ningxia vintages with dinner.

    PORK SAUSAGES

    The global halal food and beverage market is projected to grow to US$1.6 trillion by 2018, according to a report from the Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry, up from US$1.1 trillion in 2013.

    Mr Deng and other company executives pointed to President Xi Jinping’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative that aims to boost trade with a host of countries across South Asia and the Middle East, and he expects a windfall of incentives for halal food.

    But there are concerns over how strictly halal standards are followed in China.

    Last year, hundred of Muslims took to the streets in Xi’an to protest the sale of alcohol in halal restaurants. In Qinghai province a crowd destroyed a bakery after pork sausages and ham were found in its delivery trucks.

    Such fears have an impact in potential export markets, and food safety scares are common in China, from gutter oil to milk powder.

    The integrity of Chinese halal food was “questionable”, Dr Miriam Abdul Latif, a professor of food science and a halal expert at the Malaysian University of Sabah, told AFP, citing examples of “fake halal documents or certificates”.

    To build consumer trust, Dr Latif said, Chinese companies should have their products inspected by certification bodies from Muslim countries.

    SECURITY STRATEGY

    But the issue goes to the heart — or perhaps the stomach — of the relationship between religion and the state.

    China’s current halal certification system is a patchwork of local regulations, with varying strictness. Mosques technically have the right to inspect nearby facilities, but ultimate power rests with local government Ethnic and Religious Affairs Bureaux.

    At a high-level national political meeting in Beijing last month, Mr Ma Guoquan, a delegate from Ningxia, called for a single national standard for halal food, and improved enforcement.

    “There are many problems regarding halal food management that can’t be ignored,” Mr Ma said, according to the Ningxia Daily newspaper.

    But some say national laws would be anathema to the ruling party’s official atheism.

    “This kind of legislation would be contrary to the principle of secularism,” Mr Xi Wuyi, a Marxism expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences wrote on China’s Twitter-like Weibo in March. “It could threaten China’s national security strategy.”

    At the same time some Muslims complain over too much government interference in their religion.

    Away from the high-level politics of policing halal food, many of the faithful in Ningxia rely on personal relationships to guarantee quality.

    “I know the meat I buy is halal because I know the butcher, I see him frequently at the mosque for prayer,” said rural resident Na Liang. “I know the baker, I know the family that runs the noodle shop and I know all the food I eat is halal.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Regency Park Condo’s Managing Agent Prohibits Prayers On Premises, Issued Challenged To Complain To MUIS

    Regency Park Condo’s Managing Agent Prohibits Prayers On Premises, Issued Challenged To Complain To MUIS

    Freedom of worship is a right enshrined in the constitution. We have been praying under the staircase at the capark of Regency Park Condominium for many years. We understand that it is the common property of the estate and we have kept the place clean and neat and it does not obstruct any human movement nor does it pose a safety hazard to anyone.

    However, the condo manager, Ms Jennifer Peh from Saville property management pte Ltd managing agent has thrown our praying carpets and told us to pray outside the permises.

    When we appealed to let us use that little space under the staircase, she told us arrogantly “If you want to pray, go to the mosque”. She even challenged us to “complain to your MUIS”

    We work as personal drivers and have to be in the condo vicinity at all times, in case our bosses need our services. Even our bosses who are residents in the estate do not mind us praying under the staircase and our bosses feel that the harsh action and words of Ms Jennifer Peh is uncalled for.

    Where is the religious tolerance that the government keeps on promoting?

     

    Source: Ismail Ahmad