Category: Sosial

  • Ridjal Noor – The Singaporean Behind GCSE Text Studied In UK

    Ridjal Noor – The Singaporean Behind GCSE Text Studied In UK

    When Mr Ridjal Noor, 36, first wrote “Anil”, a short story about a boy living in India, he never expected that it would one day be studied by students in the United Kingdom.

    “Anil”, published in 2004, is about a seven-year-old boy who witnesses a murder in his village and faces a moral dilemma: Should he tell the truth?

    He said: “I didn’t even spend that much time writing “Anil”. It’s just surreal that there are students out there spending hours studying what I wrote.”

    Mr Ridjal, who was an engineering student and now runs his own display stand and publishing company, credits his polytechnic communications lecturer, Ms Shirley Joseph, for discovering his talent and encouraging him to pursue writing.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Help Pours In For Cancer-Stricken Single Father

    Help Pours In For Cancer-Stricken Single Father

    The plight of a single father of three children who could no longer work since he was diagnosed with oesophageal cancer touched many and there have been an outpouring of kindness to him.

    Mr Goh Hoon Tiong, 44, is deeply grateful to the strangers who have reached out to him in various ways, be it in cash donation or in kind, such as groceries like rice, oil and biscuits.

    Mr Goh, who used to work two jobs, says: “No matter how hard it is, I will fight and make it work. Who says a man cannot be a good parent.”

    The pain he has to bear is evident from the way he sits — crouching in a ball, with his hands gripping his arms tightly. When the pain from a metal stent in his esophagus is too much to bear, he could not even talk.

    He has been receiving a total of 30 sessions of chemotherapy and radiotherapy treatment and will undergo a surgery to remove the tumour soon.

    “For now, I’m just taking one step at a time. I hope to come out of the surgery alive,” he says.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • MENDAKI Starts New Fundraising Drive For Education Trust Fund

    MENDAKI Starts New Fundraising Drive For Education Trust Fund

    The Council for the Development of Singapore Malay/Muslim Community (MENDAKI) is starting a new fundraising drive for its Education Trust Fund (ETF).

    The target is S$12 million. There is currently S$6.4 million in the fund, which provides financial assistance to students from low-income Malay-Muslim families. About 67,000 students have benefitted from the fund so far.

    At an appreciation lunch for MENDAKI partners on Saturday (Oct 3), Minister-in-charge of Muslim Affairs Yaacob Ibrahim, who is also chairman of MENDAKI, called on about 250 partners to join him in a fundraising project to raise, or even surpass S$12 million.

    The initial amount of the ETF was S$12 million, when it was first introduced in 2002. The money was raised by the fundraising committee led by the late Mr Abu Bakar Maidin, a social work veteran.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Church Opens Its Gates So That Muslim Worshippers Can Park During Friday Prayers

    Church Opens Its Gates So That Muslim Worshippers Can Park During Friday Prayers

    <Facebook post by Yu Ran>

    There is a mosque and a church next to each other in my neighborhood, because there isn’t any parking space around, the church opened its grounds so that Muslim worshippers can park during Friday prayers.

    Little scenes like this in Singapore makes me proud to call Singapore my home and it reminds me that no matter how different we are as human beings everyone deserves a little parking space on this planet. — at Spiritual Grace Presbyterian Church 长老会灵恩堂

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Pulau Ubin ‘Far From A Dying Town’

    Pulau Ubin ‘Far From A Dying Town’

    A forested route in Pulau Ubin that is the dwelling of poisonous snakes and wild boars leads to a mangrove swamp that Mr Quek Kim Kiang frequents daily to catch crabs.

    Using a hook attached to a pole, the 63-year-old fishes out the edible crustaceans from the mud. He then sells them to families on the island or the mainland for about $25 a kilogram.

    Mr Quek’s daily routine was uncovered by anthropologist Vivienne Wee, who has discovered “hubs of economic activity and vast social networks within and beyond the island”.

    She said this puts to rest the assumption that the island, home to 38 residents – down from 2,000 in the 1950s to 1970s – is a dying town.

    Through her research, she found that the islanders have established links with people beyond the island, such as former residents, as well as the 300,000 day trippers it gets annually. She said that heritage, nature and sports interest groups also have ties to the place.

    Dr Wee, managing director of anthropology company Ethnographica, was commissioned by the National Heritage Board (NHB) to map the island’s multi-faceted layers of social history. This is the first such comprehensive effort for Pulau Ubin.

    She is leading a five-member research team, which started work in April and has conducted interviews with more than 20 residents. The project is expected to be completed by December or January.

    NHB assistant chief executive of policy and development Alvin Tan agreed with Dr Wee’s assessment.

    “Everyone thinks the trades here are in decline, but that is not true. There is a actually a sense of rejuvenation and renewal,” he said.

    For instance, Mr Quek, hoping to pass on his crab-catching skills, has taken a disciple under his wing.

    “I am passing on my technique to a nine-year-old boy from Singapore who comes here on weekends to fish with his father,” he said.

    The information gathered by Dr Wee and her team so far can be clustered into categories such as economic activities, trades and skills; social lives and relationships; religious festivals; and kampung architecture.

    The cultural mapping project, first suggested by the Singapore Heritage Society, was undertaken by NHB. It is one of the board’s contributions to an ongoing Ubin Project led by the Ministry of National Development.

    The ministry is working with the community and other government agencies through its Friends of Ubin Network to gather ideas on how to maintain the island’s rustic charm. Its plans include preserving Ubin’s nature, biodiversity and heritage.

    NHB’s Mr Tan said research findings will be shared with the network “to help the authorities develop sensitive strategies to retain and enhance the island’s rustic charms”.

    The project also builds on NHB’s earlier work on the island, which includes a 2013 documentation of its historical sites, a documentary on its boatmen and a virtual tour.

    Among Dr Wee’s other interviewees is farmer turned drink-seller Wang Xiao San, known by islanders as Madam Lai Huat So, 76. She represents the varied skillsets of an average islander.

    Madam Lai, who zips around the 10.2 sq km, boomerang-shaped island on a motorbike, used to farm vegetables, grow fruit trees, rear poultry and cultivate prawns.

    While she continues to maintain 90 durian trees and 10 rambutan and jackfruit trees, her main source of income today is from her Ah Ma Drink Stall along Jalan Jelutong, on the island’s main strip.

    The stall – a blue wooden structure built by her late husband – still gets about 100 customers a day on weekends, thanks to day trippers.

    Madam Lai also exhibits the island’s culture of self-reliance, as she is able to build structures such as chicken coops on her own. She picked up these skills from her late father, an influential islander credited with building most of Pulau Ubin’s kampung homes.

    In addition, the island’s Wei To Temple complex, on which a Hindu shrine was recently established alongside a Tibetan Buddhist temple and Taoist temple, is evidence that the landscape is continually evolving, said Dr Wee.

    The shrine is just a few months old and is where deities from demolished Hindu temples on mainland Singapore were relocated by devotees.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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