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  • Lions XII Captain Isa Halim Is NKF’s Live Right Ambassador

    Lions XII Captain Isa Halim Is NKF’s Live Right Ambassador

    Footballer Isa Halim, the captain of the LionsXII team, is helping the National Kidney Foundation promote healthy living and prevent kidney disease as its Live Right Ambassador.

    He took on his new role as the foundation launched a fundraising campaign at Wisma Atria on Sunday (Apr 12).

    The campaign aims to promote a healthy lifestyle especially among youths and the Malay community, which statistics show makes up a disproportionate number of kidney patients.

    Isa showed off his skills to some members of the audience at the launch and then spoke of how he intends to play his role.

    “I’ll be doing a soccer clinic with the Malay community and I’d like to educate them on the importance of exercising right, eating right,” said Isa. “For me, prevention is very important. At an early stage, for them to be educated on how to live right and eat right is a good opportunity to bring down the number of dialysis patients.”

    Also unveiled at the launch was a pair of limited edition porcelain vases, given to the foundation by former president S R Nathan. The vases were inspired by the Singapore flag and the national flower Vanda Miss Joaquim.

    Former President S R Nathan commissioned 138 pairs of porcelain vases from Franz Collection, renowned for its porcelain creations, to raise funds for charity. NKF is one of the charities to receive a pair of these limited edition porcelain vases.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Dakota Crescent: Singapore’s Oldest Housing Estate To Undergo Redevelopment

    Dakota Crescent: Singapore’s Oldest Housing Estate To Undergo Redevelopment

    Squeals of joy erupted from the Old Dove playground in the middle of Dakota Crescent, one of Singapore’s oldest housing estates, as children played on tyre wheels, and whizzed down the slides at the estate’s farewell party.

    But the scene is bittersweet for current and former residents as it is slated for redevelopment by the end of 2016.

    “When we were living here, it was like a kampong. Nobody locked their doors. We would greet each other as we walked past, unlike these days, where doors are shut tightly. At night, the bread seller would shout out “Roti! Roti!”,” said 92-year-old Tan Hai Lan, who lived in the estate for 26 years.

    The retiree had moved in when the estate was first built in 1958, with her then one-year-old daughter, Dr Lee Jee Mui.

    “We have trees like this, and as we grew up, the trees grew up with us,” said the now 58-year-old dentist, tearing as she recalled her fond childhood memories.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Capturing Life Of Singapore’s Southern Islanders In A Documentary

    Capturing Life Of Singapore’s Southern Islanders In A Documentary

    Some habits die hard, especially for a group of former residents of Pulau Sudong, an island south of the Singapore mainland.

    Every Saturday and Sunday morning, about 20 of them set out from West Coast Park on their motor boats packed with traditional fish traps called bubu. These are conical iron-mesh traps placed on the seabed during low tide.

    One of these dedicated fishermen is delivery driver and father of four Hamzah Mohamad, 60, who says he seldom buys fish from the market.

    He says: “Having grown up by the sea, you get used to eating fish fresh from the sea. They have a kind of sweetness to them.”

    He now lives in a three-room HDB flat in West Coast with his wife and youngest daughter.

    These weekend fishing trips hark back to a simpler, more rustic “island lifestyle”: the fishing culture common to Pulau Sudong and the southern islands of Singapore.

    The way of life on some of these islands was considerably more communal compared with mainland Singapore.

    Each island was a self-contained community consisting of mostly Malay families. Some families subsisted on fish caught by the men while a few grew their own vegetables or kept chickens. Some had cats or goats.

    Overseen by a village chief (called the penghulu), some of these islands had amenities such as a community centre, a police post, a school, a mosque, a cemetery and a couple of provision shops. There was also a dispensary where a nurse would drop by a couple of times a week to do post-natal checks and give injections.

    Not all the islands had villages; some had specific uses. For instance, Pulau Senang was once a penal colony and Pulau Satumu had a lighthouse, and its residents were the wardens and their assistants.

    In any case, most islanders resettled on the mainland between the 1970s and 1990s for various reasons. For instance, Pulau Sudong was turned into a military live firing area while Pulau Seking and Pulau Semakau were joined to enclose a rubbish landfill.

    However, there remains considerable interest in life on these islands even though it has disappeared due to resettlement and development.

    Island life has inspired recent projects such as Balik Pulau: Stories From Singapore’s Islands, an exhibition held last August at the National Museum of Singapore.

    Most recently, these southern islanders are the subject of a documentary project called Island Nation, by photographers Edwin Koo, 36, Zakaria Zainal, 30, and Juliana Tan, 25. Their aim was to capture a part of history which they say is not recorded in textbooks.

    Their project is part of the National Library Board’s Singapore Memory Project, which showcases Singapore memories leading up to this year, when Singapore turns 50.

    Island Nation is by far the most ambitious project undertaken to record the oral history of life on 12 of the southern islands. The islands are: Sentosa, Pulau Seringat, Pulau Brani, Lazarus Island, Kusu Island and St John’s Island on the eastern part, and Pulau Bukom, Pulau Semakau, Pulau Seking, Pulau Sudong, Pulau Senang and Pulau Satumu on the western side.

    The photographers have contacted more than 100 islanders aged from their 50s to 90s to collect their stories.

    The project will showcase the memories of 30 residents going as far back as the 1940s, using different formats from photo essays and short video clips to text essays and multimedia packages.

    These will be put up on a website that will go live next month.

    In June, a photo exhibition will be staged at the Lee Kong Chian Reference Library at the National Library of Singapore.

    It will feature photographs of the islanders as well as old images from private collections, including those belonging to the handful of islanders who owned cameras.

    To be put on display, too, are photographs by the late Britain-born Ivan Polunin, who was well known for making films for the British Broadcasting Corporation on how people lived in Singapore between 1950 and 1973.

    Speaking to SundayLife!, these islanders paint a picture of frugal but tightly-knit communities which lacked modern conveniences but made up for it with generosity and friendliness.

    Mr Teo Yan Eng, 90, used to help two of his younger brothers who ran a provision shop on Pulau Seking. He says there were 58 families on the island and the 400 to 500 people there “all knew one another”.

    The Teos were the only Chinese family there, but felt totally at home. He says: “Neighbours dropped by to chit-chat even if they had nothing to buy.”

    He and his brothers did not fish, but their fishermen neighbours often shared their catch.

    During Malay weddings and Hari Raya, the brothers exchanged gifts – usually something from their provision shop or a hongbao – with their neighbours, who gave them kueh and nasi briyani.

    Although the islanders mostly interacted among themselves, with some inter-marrying, they also caught up with those from other southern islands, where they had relatives.

    There was an annual sports meet called the Pesta Five S, drawing participants from the five islands of Sudong, Semakau, Sakijang Bendera (now known as St John’s Island), Seking and Seraya. Pesta is the Malay word for carnival.

    The islands took turns to host the games, which took place over a few weekends. There were land games such as tug-of-war and soccer, as well as water games such as sampan races.

    Mr Rosli Manan, 51, a constituency support executive who was born in Pulau Sudong, recalls turning up with other village children for these meets. “It was a very lively time for the islanders,” he says.

    Life was austere then, as most of the islands lacked running water and sometimes, electricity.

    Mr Teo of Pulau Seking remembers using kerosene lamps at night. To get fresh water for cooking and drinking, his brother took 15-minute motor boat rides to Pulau Bukom, returning with big covered pails of water.

    Pulau Bukom was one of the more developed islands in the south because Singapore’s first offshore oil refinery opened there in 1961. It also had a hospital where Mr Teo’s brother was sent to when he got a sharkfish bone stuck in his foot while walking on the beach.

    Living so near the coast also made them more vulnerable to the elements. A big storm once blew off the roofs of a few attap houses, including that of the Teos’.

    Despite these challenges, Mr Teo has fond memories of his island life. He says: “The air was fresher and we had fresh fish to eat every few days.”

    In fact, a common refrain among older islanders, who have been relocated to the mainland, seems to be an intense longing for the past.

    The young looked forward to the move. Mr Rosli of Pulau Sudong says that when he had to move at the age of 15, he was very excited. He had already been spending his weekdays on the mainland at his aunt’s place as he was studying at Yusof Ishak Secondary School.

    “We were looking forward to having a new flat with better amenities.”

    His family of eight were given about $3,000 by the Government and bought a three-room HDB flat in Clementi.

    So they wrapped up their clothes and cooking utensils with bedsheets and packed them into boxes bought from the mainland. They had to be careful because there was not going to be a return trip.

    Like most of the villagers, they donated their furniture and boats to their relatives in Indonesia. Livestock such as chicken were also given away.

    Mr Hamzah adapted quickly to life in Singapore, but his late father-in-law, Mr Yakop Getim, who was born on the island and resettled on the mainland in the 1970s, could not get used to living in an HDB flat.

    He built a home for himself out of a sampan moored at West Coast Park and continued to live there till he died a few years ago. He slept on a straw mat in the sampan and used a kerosene lamp to help him see at night. He made a living looking after boats and engines for their owners.

    But for Mr Hamzah and other former Pulau Sudong residents, the island lifestyle is a thing of the past. Going out to sea every weekend to fish, and catching a glimpse of their beloved island, will have to do.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Najib Razak Was My Hope But He Broke His Promise – Dr Mahathir Mohamad

    Najib Razak Was My Hope But He Broke His Promise – Dr Mahathir Mohamad

    Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad has unleashed a scathing attack against Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, saying that the Prime Minister broke his promise to build a crooked bridge between Johor Baru and Singapore.

    In a five-part interview uploaded on a blog, Din Turtle, two days after Najib’s television interview, Dr Mahathir responded that the Prime Minister had supported the project when he took over office from Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.

    “He was my hope after Pak Lah (Abdullah) resigned. He said he would build the bridge when he became the prime minister even if Singapore opposes to it. But he didn’t do,” claimed the former premier.

    Dr Mahathir said he was unhappy when Najib broke his promise and appeared to “kowtow” to Singapore for not proceeding with the project.

    “If Singapore does not agree to this, it is not my fault. It is our sovereign right, it is in our own territorial area, territorial waters. Half of that Causeway belongs to us. I’m not touching Singapore’s side.

    “He (Najib) said he made an agreement with Singapore, where is our independence? Are we part of Singapore?” questioned Dr Mahathir.

    In a special interview with TV3 on Thursday, Najib said Dr Mahathir’s attacks against him could have been triggered due to their disagreement on the crooked bridge and the 1Malaysia People’s Aid (BR1M) cash handouts.

    On BR1M, Dr Mahathir insisted that “feeding people with free money” was not an answer, but creating jobs and providing education to the people was what the country needs.

    “We should create jobs for the people, give them education, train them so that they can live and make money for themselves. You can give welfare, but only to the people who are in need of welfare,” he said.

    On the 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) controversy, Dr Mahathir said it was better for Najib to resign now to prevent Barisan Nasional from losing in the next general election as the investigations to the company could take years to complete.

    “It has to be now because we still have two years to recover. If he doesn’t go now, the Public Accounts Committee and others will be investigating the matter for the next two or three years and come GE, if he is still around, we will lose.

    “I think there will be a lot of trouble for everyone. And those who cover up, they will have to pay the price,” he said, adding that there should be ‘two or three’ independent commissions to look into the matter.

    “We need ‘neutral’ people to do a thorough investigation as to where the money went. Who was handling the money? Who is this Jho Low? Suddenly he became very important. He is not a civil servant, suddenly he has such power,” said Dr Mahathir.

    On former police commando Sirul Azhar Umar, who was convicted of the murder of Mongolian model Altantuya Shaariibuu, Dr Mahathir said that every person who was sentenced to death has the privilege to appeal to the King or to the Sultan.

    “I was formerly a prime minister, you know. My duty is to advise the King (on whether the appeal should be granted or not),” he said.

    Dr Mahathir, who met Sirul’s mother recently, insisted that the issue was not about politics.

    He said that Sirul as a policeman would not kill unless he was attacked or instructed by someone.

     

    Source: www.thestar.com.my

  • Lee Kuan Yew DVD In High Demand

    Lee Kuan Yew DVD In High Demand

    More than 10,000 DVDs on the late Mr Lee Kuan Yew have been sold over the week of April 6 to April 11.

    The three-part documentary, Time Nor Tide, was part of a series of special programmes broadcast by MediaCorp to commemorate his life and legacy. The documentary can be watched online, but was made available on DVD due to public request.

    Net proceeds of the first public sale will be donated to the Community Chest, said MediaCorp, adding that they will also be releasing other programmes on Mr Lee on DVD by end-April.

    These include In His Own Words: A six-part series of his key speeches over the years, and Forging A Nation: A compilation of short stories capturing significant moments and issues in Singapore’s history.

    The DVDs have been flying off the shelves since they hit the stores on Monday (April 6) and by the evening of the first day of its release, there were more than 1,000 people on a waiting list across Poh Kim stores.

    Video CD store Poh Kim says its customers usually ask for more than one copy with some reserving as many as 10 to 40 copies. Bookstore Popular set a limit of 2 copies per customer due to overwhelming demand.

    One lady at Poh Kim told Channel NewsAsia on Monday that she had bought 10 DVDs on the late Mr Lee – both for herself and her friends who live overseas.

    “I was very surprised,” she said. “I understand that it is being launched today, but 15 minutes into store opening, I called up several stores — at least five or six of them — everyone told me they were out of stock.”

    Another lady at Popular said: “I had already put my name on the waiting list. So I quickly rushed here because I was scared the second batch might be snatched away by the people.”

    “I can view at my own leisure and I don’t have to worry about it being taken down anytime soon,” said a man at Popular after he bought the DVD.

    One lady at the bookstore said it was expected that there was such high demand for the documentary.

    “He is our founding father,” she said. “And everyone will want to keep a copy of that for memory’s sake.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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