Category: Sosial

  • Rahayu Mahzam: Pemerintah Harus Memberi Kelonggaran Bagi Muslimah Bertudung, Luaskan Ruang Berbicara Tentang Hal-Hal Agama

    Rahayu Mahzam: Pemerintah Harus Memberi Kelonggaran Bagi Muslimah Bertudung, Luaskan Ruang Berbicara Tentang Hal-Hal Agama

    Masyarakat tempatan perlu mengadakan perbincangan-perbincangan “sangat berterus terang” tentang isu-isu nyata.

    Usaha menggalakkan keharmonian kaum dan agama tidak lagi boleh dijalankan di peringkat luaran sahaja dengan setakat menghadiri majlis-majlis budaya satu sama lain.

    Sebaliknya, Singapura harus “mengadakan ruang untuk bercakap tentang identiti kita, amalan keagamaan seperti membakar kertas sembahyang, pemakaian tudung, memainkan muzik semasa Thaipusam misalnya.”

    Demikian seruan Anggota Parlimen GRC Jurong, semasa menyampaikan ucapan sulung beliau dalam perbahasan di Parlimen petang tadi (28 Jan).

    Cik Rahayu menambah, seharusnya ada dialog-dialog terbuka kerana perbincangan sedemikian akan menghasilkan kefahaman tentang keprihatinan satu sama lain.

    Mengulas mengenai debat tentang isu pengganasan, beliau menekankan, masyarakat Melayu/Islam Singapura menolak fahaman sedemikian.

    Lantaran itu Cik Rahayu menekankan, masyarakat Melayu/Islam tidak boleh dipersalahkan dan taat setia masyarakat tersebut “tidak patut dipersoalkan”.

    HARAP ISU TUDUNG DISEMAK LAGI

    “Saya rasakan penting untuk Pemerintah mengambil langkah untuk menggalakkan perbincangan terbuka tentang hal-hal sebegini agar segala prasangka atau rasa salah faham dapat dilenyapkan dengan segera. Juga perlu sentiasa ada peringatan yang tegas untuk mengutuk dan mengekang tindakan yang berbaur Islamofobia.

    “Satu lagi hal yang berada di benak fikiran masyarakat kita adalah isu tudung. Saya harap hal ini dapat disemak lagi oleh Pemerintah dan kelonggaran diberi agar wanita bertudung tidak terbatas untuk bekerja dalam mana-mana kerjaya pilihannya,” ujar Cik Rahayu.

    Namun beliau juga menekankan, dalam pada masyarakat mengharapkan sesuatu daripada Pemerintah, ia juga perlu bersikap matang dan berbincang secara hormat.

    Masyarakat Melayu kata beliau perlu menggunakan peluang yang ada untuk terus menjalin hubungan dengan kaum lain agar ada pemahaman yang mendalam tentang budaya dan agama Melayu/Islam dapat terjalin.

    Masyarakat Melayu/Islam kata beliau, sebahagian daripada masyarakat majmuk Singapura dan perlu sentiasa prihatin untuk menjaga keharmonian kaum dan agama.

    SOKONG NCMP, KRITIK KOMEN KETUA PARTI PEKERJA

    Dalam ucapan beliau itu, Cik Rahayu juga mengalu-alukan peningkatan dan perubahan kepada skim Anggota Parlimen Tanpa Kawasan Undi (NCMP) yang diumumkan Perdana Menteri Lee Hsien Loong semalam.

    Beliau melahirkan harapan untuk melihat lebih ramai anggota politik pembangkang seperti Encik Leon Perera dan Encik Dennis Tan, bagi menghasilkan perdebatan yang lasak demi menggubal dasar negara.

    Cik Rahayu bagaimanapun membidas ketua pembangkang Low Thia Khiang dengan berkata, beliau “agak terkejut” para NCMP itu disamakan dengan kiambang.

    “Tiada apa yang boleh menghalang NCMP daripada bergerak di akar umbi, melakukan lawatan rumah ke rumah dan menganjurkan sesi-sesi untuk mengumpulkan keprihatinan penduduk. Hakikatnya, saya teringat Encik Perera menyebut bahawa beliau melakukan kerja-kerja akar umbi di East Coast dan Aljunied. Peningkatan-peningkatan tersebut mengukuhkan kedudukan NCMP dan saya rasa sukar untuk berhujah sebaliknya,” ujar Cik Rahayu lagi.

    AMALKAN KELONGGARAN BERI BANTUAN

    Menyentuh tentang golongan yang berisiko dan kurang bernasib baik, beliau menyeru supaya lebih banyak kelonggaran diamalkan dalam membantu mereka.

    Sebahagian bantuan kata beliau dibelenggu oleh pelbagai peraturan yang menyukarkan.

    Cik Rahayu berkata: “Kita tidak harus berkompromi dalam sokongan sosial yang perlu diberikan kepada individu-individu dan keluarga-keluarga yang memerlukan bantuan. Malah, pada masa-masa sukarlah, kita perlu bersikap lebih ihsan.”

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Young Entrepreneur @teebyzeids Raises Funds For “From Singapore To Palestine”

    Young Entrepreneur @teebyzeids Raises Funds For “From Singapore To Palestine”

    Bro maybe you guys missed this on instagram

    teebyzeids 4

    Recently these young entrepreneurs with huge ambitions and even bigger hearts from @teebyzeids raised funds for the people of “From Singapore to Palestine”. (FS2P)

    teebyzeids 3

    For every purchase made, these guys donated $2 to the people of “From Singapore to Palestine” (FS2P).

    FS2P

    Simple and effective way to raise donations for a worthy cause that is close to the hearts of us Muslims.

    Check out their designs…they have some very cool stuff.

    teebyzeids 1

    teebyzeids 2

    When the next round comes around, don’t hesitate to do your part because Muslim lives matter too!

    Muslim Lives Matter Too

     

    #MuslimLivesMattersToo

    Fikri

    [Reader Contribution]

     

  • Single Mum Of Seven Children Turns Over A New Leaf For Sake Of Children’s Futures

    Single Mum Of Seven Children Turns Over A New Leaf For Sake Of Children’s Futures

    She had seven children in seven years.

    What made things worse for the unwed mother was that she had to raise them mostly on her own because the children’s father was in and out of jail.

    Uneducated and poor, she turned to prostitution and was also jailed for drug offences.

    Her eldest child was last week convicted of having sex with underage girls.

    Miss Milah has an 18-year-old son, Samsudin Abdullah, and six daughters aged between 11 and 17.

    Samsudin was sentenced to reformative training last Tuesday for having sex with three underage girls, theft and receiving stolen property.

    Speaking to The New Paper at her one-room rental flat in Ang Mo Kio last Wednesday, Miss Milah, 36, said she was furious when she found out what her son did.

    “I worked like a dog to provide for him and his sisters. I wanted to give them a better childhood, one that I never had,” she said.

    “But maybe it’s good that he learns from this experience and comes out a better person.”

    Raising seven children was a hellish struggle that often left her crying at night, but she said there is nothing she would not do for her children.

    Miss Milah was raised by her grandparents, whom she thought were her parents, till she was 10. It was only after her grandmother died that her relatives told her the truth.

    Her grandfather remarried, but Miss Milah could not get along with his new wife, so she moved in with her aunt.

    At 15, she met her first boyfriend, who was five years older.

    She said: “I fell in love with him because I never had any love from family. My mother didn’t want me and I never knew my father.”

    She became pregnant soon after.

    “I was shocked and at a loss when I first found out about the pregnancy. I was young and didn’t know what to do,” she said.

    “But I did not want to be like my mother, who didn’t want me. I didn’t want to give up my child.”

    In 1996, she gave birth to her son.

    She claimed her boyfriend drank heavily and was abusive.

    “I don’t know why I stuck with him. He was the first person who was very kind to me and I thought I would just bear with it and stay by him,” said Miss Milah.

    UNSURE

    She said she did not marry him because she was unsure if he would change his ways.

    They had two more children before they moved into the Ang Mo Kio flat in 2001. That year, she was jailed for 10 months for consuming drugs.

    When she got out, she returned to her boyfriend.

    Miss Milah said her boyfriend was also arrested and jailed for various offences, including drugs.

    “Each time he came out, we would get back together and have a child. It was as if he was treating me like KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital,” she said.

    She went on to give birth to four more girls, including a pair of twins, despite her boyfriend’s continued abusive behaviour.

    But by 2004, she had had enough and she chased him out of her home.

    She said she struggled to make ends meet and decided to become a prostitute after a friend suggested it.

    “It was the worst period of my life. I hated it, but I did it because I needed the money quick for my children.”

    And she went back to drugs.

    It was also in that year that the authorities placed her seven children in different foster homes.

    “I was sad. Imagine your kids taken away from you for years. I really wanted to get them back, but I was on drugs and alcohol and involved in illegal activities,” she said.

    The turning point came in 2008, when she was jailed 18 months for heroin abuse.

    Her sentence was increased to 19 months after she fought with an inmate. She spent 11 months in an isolation cell.

    She said: “Those 11 months set me straight. I had so much time to think over what I wanted to do with my life. I resolved to change.”

    After her release in 2010, she picked up odd jobs and worked hard to regain custody of her children.

    Today, they live together in the one-room flat, which is stocked with four electric fans, soft toys and a stack of blankets the family lays out on the floor when they sleep at night.

    Money, Miss Milah said, is her greatest challenge in bringing up and providing for her children.

    She earns $1,900 a month from her cleaning job, where she is a team leader.

    “It’s hardly enough to feed my children. That’s why now I have to budget carefully. I cook every day,” she said.

    “It hurts every time I turn down my kid’s request to buy them a fast-food meal. I usually tell them I’d buy it for them another time.”

    While she had her own brushes with the law, it pained her to watch her son packed off behind bars.

    “As a mother, you can only tell and warn them not to do something and provide an environment for them to grow up in,” she said.

    This is why she is planning to leave her one-room Ang Mo Kio flat and move to a two-room unit in Yishun.

    “We’ve had so many bad memories here. Once I’m done clearing the backlog of utility bills, it’s time for a fresh start.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Malacca Woman Escapes Bond And Enjoy Life In Canada, Singaporean Guarantors Left To Suffer

    Malacca Woman Escapes Bond And Enjoy Life In Canada, Singaporean Guarantors Left To Suffer

    Admin tolong share about this cheat. For the benefit of the community

    Ong Aik Seng

    This woman frm Malacca study at NUS…after that she want to do her Masters & PhD at MIT in the States. At first a pvt company sponsor her and she got 4 friends from NUS to become guarantor. Total amount to S$700,000.  Not small amount. After that NUS took over the sponsorship from the company so she was supposed to return to Sg to serve her bond but she never come back.

    At last the friends have to settle with NUS using their own hard-earned money. She and her family don’t want to be responsible and ignore the friends. Her family has business in Malacca. She herself enjoying life in Canada now with her well-paying job with the PhD that her friends are paying for.

    NUS Malacca Cheat

    This is very unfair to the friends who have their own family and the high cost of living in SIngapore to grapple with.

    Government must be very careful to not give scholarships to foreigners who run away in the end. Better give the money to more deserving Singaporean students who may not be as smart, but overcome more problems to get to where they are.

    I also know our community sometimes very giving and very soft-hearted…everything also ok. People borrow from loanshark also they don’t mind become guarantor. Then we are the ones who suffer. If we can help in other ways, by all means. But be very careful before you agree to become guarantor. if not become like this.

    Seri

    [Reader Contribution]

     

  • Colossal Weddings: No Need To Cheat And Pretend To Be Us, We Welcome You To Join Us

    Colossal Weddings: No Need To Cheat And Pretend To Be Us, We Welcome You To Join Us

    I always tell my photographers to be loyal, sincere and honest in their craft. Sure it is not always the easiest way, but it is the most fulfilling way to live a life doing what you love. Photography for us, all 20 of us, is an escape. An escape from the day jobs, the part time jobs, the family dramas, the financial woes, the stresses of society, the workload from school & the constant struggle to keep up with peers. If we were in this for the money, we would’ve gone on to do something a lot more lucrative. But instead, we all chose photography.

    And that’s the thing. We’re not here to sue other photographers. What benefit do I get from a lawsuit against a 17 year old kid? The whole reason Colossal Photos & Colossal Weddings was set up was to create a support network & protect the rights of photographers who were being taken advantaged of. And we’ve done exactly that and will continue to do so. We’ve managed to create an environment that bears no hierarchy, no envy, no malice, and have managed to put together individuals from the most unlikely of backgrounds. We’re truly a family unit, and I love every single one of the guys on my team. And we, in turn, hold the brand close to our hearts.

    So when we get word of people outside of Colossal using the brand for their own selfish purposes, the knee jerk reaction is protect the brand first and claim ownership of it. We’ve always kept quiet about it even though it has happened a few times in the past. However tonight was different, and I guess we couldn’t keep quiet anymore. We shared, shamed, wrote our opinions and lashed out on these people. However, these are very same people that we have worked day in and day out to protect. Yes, it is wrong to blatantly disregard etiquette just for a few bucks, but how we approach these problems must change. I felt we truly lost sight of what we’re fighting for for a couple of moments tonight.

    From now onwards, we’re going to take a different approach. If you’re truly passionate, honest, and sincere about learning photography and being part of Colossal, our doors are always open. There is no need to lie, deceive, manipulate clients just to get the job. It’s a small world, a smaller industry, and an even smaller community, so naturally, word gets around quickly. We can help you get that job with honesty & integrity, and you can most definitely help us out as well.

    A 17 year old, claiming to be part of the Weddings team just to get ahead. The damage to Colossal? Probably minimal. But I think the damage we did to her tonight might end up being a lot worse than expected. I would hate for someone to quit photography just because of what happened tonight. To a lot of people, photography is just a hobby, a fad, a phase, a risk, a kid’s job. But to some, it is the only language we know. And I wouldn’t know what to do if someone took that away from me.

    I understand from the people I’ve spoken to today that this is not the first time that she’s done this to other photographers. I’d like to reach out to whoever you are, to give me a call on my mobile or message me on Facebook, and I’d like to invite you to see what the team at Colossal truly stand for. And maybe, just maybe, in the future you’ll be an amazing photographer with great intentions, integrity and dignity to hold your own.

     

    Source: Afiq Omar