Category: Sosial

  • Henry Park Primary Principal: Pupil Apologetic, Counselled Over NDP Gesture

    Henry Park Primary Principal: Pupil Apologetic, Counselled Over NDP Gesture

    A pupil from Henry Park Primary School who was caught on camera making a rude gesture at the National Day Parade (NDP) on Wednesday (Aug 9) is “deeply apologetic” for his action and has been counselled, said his school principal.

    “The student regrets his action and is deeply apologetic. The school and his parents have counselled him, and will ensure he learns from this incident,” Henry Park Primary principal Chia Soo Keng told The Straits Times on Thursday afternoon.

     

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • New Citizen Mat Salleh Is First Caucasian Bus Captain In Singapore

    New Citizen Mat Salleh Is First Caucasian Bus Captain In Singapore

    The next time you board a bus, a driver may also greet you with a cheerful “goeie more” (pronounced ho-yah mo-ra) on your morning commute.

    That will be Mr Daniel Jacobus Ellis wishing you good morning in his native Afrikaans, one of the 11 official languages of South Africa.

    The 34-year-old started his training to be a bus captain in February and has been driving with SBS Transit since April.

    He is the only Caucasian employed by the firm as a bus captain. SBS Transit has about 5,800 bus captains.

    He is believed to be the only bus captain here from South Africa.

    He said he had previously worked as a freelance business analyst here, but turned to the bus company for a stable job.

    “I saw an ad at the LRT station advertising positions for bus captains, and I thought to myself, why not give it a try,” he said.

    Mr Ellis – who moved here in 2011 when he married his Singaporean wife – gained his citizenship two years ago.

    Home is a four-room Build-To-Order Housing Board flat in Punggol which he shares with his wife, a school counsellor.

    To keep himself alert during his 12-hour long shifts – which can see him start the day as early as 2.45am – he enjoys a cup of kopi gao (thick coffee) from the Hougang Central Bus Interchange canteen.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Rombongan Jemaah Haji Pertama Singapura Selamat Berlepas Ke Saudi Arabia

    Rombongan Jemaah Haji Pertama Singapura Selamat Berlepas Ke Saudi Arabia

    Kumpulan pertama jemaah haji Singapura s elamat berlepas menuju ke Tanah Suci pada jam 5.40 petang tadi (9 Ogos).

    Rombongan itu terdiri daripada 39 jemaah dari dua ejen haji atau GSA, iaitu Halijah Travels & Tours Pte Ltd dan Shahidah Travel & Tours Pte Ltd.

    Mereka dijangkakan tiba di Jeddah sekitar jam 9.00 malam, waktu Jeddah. Para jemaah akan memulakan perjalanan mereka ke Madinah setibanya mereka di Jeddah.

    Kumpulan jemaah ini dijangkakan pulang pada 9 September.

    Rombongan terakhir Singapura ke Tanah Suci pula dijadualkan berangkat pada 26 Ogos ini.

     

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Will Malay-Muslim Officers In Frontline Public Service Roles Be Allowed To Wear Hijabs If Halimah Yacob Becomes President?

    Will Malay-Muslim Officers In Frontline Public Service Roles Be Allowed To Wear Hijabs If Halimah Yacob Becomes President?

    The online sphere is especially interested in establishment favourite Halimah, who finally announced her intention to take part in the race after months of speculation, last Sunday.

    Questions on Halimah’s ‘malayness’ and whether she can really participate in an election that has been expressly set aside for Malay candidates, given that her father is Indian, have gained much traction.

    Opinions that her resignation as a minority MP goes against the basis of the GRC system have also been volleyed by several prominent parties. Former PAP MP Inderjit Singh said that a sitting MP resigning from office to contest the presidential race may go against the spirit of the Office as intended by Lee Kuan Yew, while ex-Association of Malay Professionals director Nizam Ismail asserted that Halimah’s resignation will dilute minority representation in Marsiling Yew-Tee GRC and in Parliament.

    Meanwhile, opposition political party Singapore Democratic Party has taken issue with the Government’s decision to not call for a by-election to fill Halimah’s roles. Calling the decision “an abuse of the system” and one that “makes a mockery of the general elections,” the party said that it is exploring legal remedies to compel the Government to call for a by-election.

    In the midst of all this, former senior political correspondent from the Straits Times, Ismail Kassim, has put forth another question about Halimah’s candidacy: if Halimah becomes president, will a photo of her wearing the hijab hang in all public sector offices?

    This question is particularly notable since Malay-Muslim women in public service frontline roles, like police officers and nurses, are still not freely allowed to wear hijabs at work in Singapore.

    What do you think? Will Malay-Muslim women in frontline public service roles still be barred from wearing the hijab if the head of state is a hijab-wearing woman? Or will such women be finally free to wear hijabs if Halimah is elected?

     

    Source: www.theindependent.sg

  • Don’t Wait The Malay EP, Singaporeans Must Start Changing Attitudes On Inclusivity

    Don’t Wait The Malay EP, Singaporeans Must Start Changing Attitudes On Inclusivity

    It’s the eve of National Day and perhaps it’s timely that I’ve been thinking about the Presidential Elections (which I was supposed to be on duty for until I decided to leave the service). This whole PE debacle seems to sum up the story of my life. “Pakistanis” and “Indians”, running for a spot reserved for a “Malay” President.

    My dad is of Pakistani descent (even though he registered himself as Indian in his IC), and my grandparents were born in Ipoh, Malaya. My dad himself, was born in Singapore and grew up in Geylang Serai, the heart of the Malay kampong. His family speaks English and Malay, though our primary language is English.

    My mum is of Indian heritage. Her father left India as an orphaned young man, and came to Singapore looking for work. She grew up in Macpherson, speaking English and Tamil.

    My parents are both Muslim, born into Muslim families.

    Growing up, half Indian half Pakistani, Muslim and learning Malay in school, you slowly learn that conformity is lauded. Your wavy hair curls in all the wrong directions, it is too frizzy, your skin colour too “black” for your friends (and more-than-friends). You don’t fit in with the Indians because you don’t speak Tamil, and while you eat at the Malay stall, you don’t fit in with the Malays cos .. you know .. you’re not Malay.

    I struggled with this my whole life. Where’s the line that makes you Indian enough? Where’s the line that makes you Malay enough?

    People comment that I shouldn’t forget my Pakistani culture – I should learn Urdu. My parents don’t even speak it. Being Pakistani meant Bollywood movies (SRK Kajol love), chappatis (on a rare occasion – more so when dadi was still around), and that one trip back to the village when I was in primary school. Does that make me Pakistani enough?

    People comment that it’s a shame I don’t speak my mother tongue “Tamil”. Just because my mum speaks it. I spent six months working in an NGO in India. We eat chicken curry, muruku and I wore a saree once (for my cousins wedding). Does that make me Indian enough?

    People comment that my Malay is too proper, it sounds unnatural. I didn’t grow up speaking Malay, yes, my tuition teacher made me speak in bahasa baku. Yes, I got a distinction for my Malay oral for ‘O’ levels. Yes, my Malay grades were better than my English grades. Yes, I like pantuns of empat kerats and peribahasas but I also love rock kapak. Yes, I grew up reading Pak Pandir and Gila-Gila. Yes, we eat masak merah, sambal goreng and rendang at home. Nasi lemak is my favourite local dish. Does that make me Malay enough?

    I am all and yet I am none.

    Our whole life, we recite, regardless of race, language or religion. And yet time and again, they try to box us in.

    Why do we look at how well a person fits into a box? Why not see how good of a person he/she is? How good of a human being?

    A righteous leader will stand up for his/her people – his/her people being EVERYONE in their nation. Not just people of the same colour, language or religion. We don’t need a figurehead to be inclusive, we don’t need to seem inclusive, we need to BE inclusive. We need to make sure that ALL our children have sufficient opportunities to rise and chase their dreams, no matter their background.

    And yes, we teach them our culture and our languages, but we also teach them the beauty of others. We teach them to be kind and to be open, we teach them to care. We teach them to strive, alone and together.

    I’m tired of being boxed in. I contain within me multitudes. I am what I am what I am.

     

    Source: Aneesa Fazal

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