Tag: malay

  • 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

  • Damanhuri Abas: Problems Of Malay-Muslim Isolationism And Foreign-Worker Terrorists Emblematic Of PAP’s Policy Failures

    Damanhuri Abas: Problems Of Malay-Muslim Isolationism And Foreign-Worker Terrorists Emblematic Of PAP’s Policy Failures

    First the Minister made statements that essentially are tacit admission of the failures of the government’s policies towards the Malay Muslim community which has caused the ‘distancing and alienation’.

    The more critical question for the Malay Muslim community to ask both the government and the Malay leadership appointed by the PAP is to explain these failures. Maybe it got to do with something called discrimination. Not so smart after all.

    Then we hear another bad news, the arrest of foreign workers who are radicals or radicalized. Again, this are glaring examples of risk that the government sadly took at the expense of the safety and interest of Singaporeans by sticking to a policy of cheap labour to shore up declining GDP instead of biting the bullet and invest in our own people to allow for greater innovation to compensate for the shortage of manpower.

    Singaporeans must begin to know that the policies of the government are shallow coming from this million-dollar paid brilliantairs and they still want to justify through another warp logic called natural aristocracy.

    Wake up lah 70%!!!

     

    Source: Damanhuri Abas

  • Zulfikar Shariff: Lee Kuan Yew Is Self-Serving Opportunist

    Zulfikar Shariff: Lee Kuan Yew Is Self-Serving Opportunist

    The last few days, the PAP Internet Brigade had been trying to promote their party and the “late great LKY”. The way they speak of him is almost Messianic.

    Let us understand who Lee Kuan Yew was. Let us understand his values..

    He is someone who will do anything for his own benefit.

    During the Japanese occupation, Lee Kuan Yew was a collaborator.

    He worked with the Japanese Propaganda service (the Hodobu). At the Hodobu, Lee Kuan Yew translated English language news for the Japanese propaganda department.

    He admitted to being well informed about the progress of the war “because for a year and a half….(he) was working in the propaganda department…” (Han, Fernandez, Tan 28)

    And yet, this hypocritical self-interested collaborator criticised the locals who collaborated with the Japanese during occupation. He said:

    “Young locals learnt enough Japanese to be employable, but beyond that most people were decent. They did not want to cooperate or collaborate with the enemy…”

    Further, he referred to those who worked closely with the Japanese as
    opportunistic.

    The luckiest of the opportunists according to Lee Kuan Yew were “contractors whom the Japanese needed to obtain basic supplies, or who were in building construction.”

    However, he admitted to being one of this “lucky” opportunists. He was in construction and did work and supplies for the Japanese military.

    With his partner, “a Shanghainese called Low You Ling… a small contractor in the construction business…we got odd jobs from Japanese companies and from the butai, the regiments that garrisoned Singapore.”

    He also teamed up with a Japanese civilian Mr Kageyama to supply the Japanese military and companies.

    When the Japanese started to lose the war, Lee Kuan Yew became worried.

    “I decided it would be better to get out of Singapore while things were still calm, I could resign from Hodobu without arousing suspicion over my motives. I applied for leave and went up to Malaya to reconnoitre Penang and the Cameron Highlands, to find out which was the safer place.”

    When he came back from Cameron Highlands, he found out that the Japanese Secret Police had become suspicious of him. He decided to stay put.

    According to Lee Kuan Yew, after the Japanese surrender, “anti-Japanese groups took the law into their own hands. They lynched, murdered, tortured or beat up informers, torturers, tormentors and accomplices- or suspected accomplices- of the Japanese… But in the last days, many collaborators managed to melt away, going into hiding or fleeing upcountry to Malaya or to the Riau islands in the south.

    The liberation did not bring what everybody wanted: punishment for the wicked and reward for the virtuous. There could be no complete squaring of accounts…”

    If all the collaborators were arrested and punished, we probably would not have the PAP today.

    References:

    Han, Fook Kwang, Sumiko Tan, and Warren Fernandez. Lee Kuan Yew: The man and his ideas. Singapore Press Holdings, 1997.

    Yew, Lee Kuan. The Singapore Story: Memoirs of Lee Kuan Yew. Vol. 1. Marshall Cavendish International Asia Pte Ltd, 2012.

     

    Source: Zulfikar Shariff

  • Abdillah Zamzuri: Berita Harian Must Ensure Proper Use Of Bahasa Melayu In Reports

    Abdillah Zamzuri: Berita Harian Must Ensure Proper Use Of Bahasa Melayu In Reports

    Today, I woke up and as per usual, I was scrolling through my Facebook updates when I came across a Berita Harian link which a friend had posted, I thought long and hard and assessed all angles possible as to why the journalist had decided to use the word ‘HANFON’ instead of ‘Telefon Bimbit’ to describe, handphone.

    image

    So, I took out my mobile phone or handphone and checked on my Kamus Pro app as to whether or not Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (DBP) had decided to adopt and accept  ‘Hanfon’ as an official Malay word.

    I typed ‘handphone’ and I got nothing. I typed ‘mobile phone’ and I got nothing.

    I typed ‘phone’ and I got 2:

    1. n (colloq) telefon: can I have your address and – number?, boleh beri saya alamat dan nombor telefon kamu?
    2. n (phonetics) bunyi, fon.

    So, I saw the word ‘fon’ for the second one. MAYBE, I missed something out. I mean, I’m conducting Malay programmes in schools and it’s my personal responsibility to use the correct words and terms in the classroom. Perhaps, in the course of my busy schedule, I could have missed out on something.

    So, I searched for ‘hanfon’ in the same Kamus Pro app, which is the official Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (DBP) Malay Dictionary application, the same organisation that researches, writes, prints and distributes Malay Dictionaries which Singapore students and teachers (and I hope those who use the Malay Language as part of their work) use.

    The search was futile.

    Okay, so maybe DBP isn’t updated so I google searched for ‘hanfon’ and the first hit I got was that it was a WELSH translation on mymemory.translated.net which meant, ‘SENT’.

    So, at this juncture, is where I feel extremely angry because the reporter had not exercised personal and professional responsibility to ensure that they were using the right words to report in a national publication read by thousands and used by thousands of students and teachers in schools.

    I cannot imagine the horror of Malay Language teachers trying to explain to students that ‘hanfon’ isn’t a Malay word and that it cannot be used in writing compositions but then again, how can the Malay Language teacher justify it when a professional writing for the official Malay newspaper in Singapore is using improper words.

    For us, Malays and Malay Language Teachers to claim that Malay Language is not being used by students and the young properly, and have difficulty to teach it isn’t just the responsibility of Malay Language Teachers alone. It is and should be the responsibility of all who use the Malay Language, especially so if you are a working professional publishing the NATIONAL MALAY LANGUAGE DAILY.

    To cut corners in view of space constraint and switch with using a word that does not even exist in the Malay dictionary is simply irresponsible, lacks integrity, lacks professionalism and clearly, shouldn’t even be allowed to in the first place.

    If this improper and unjustified use of the Bahasa Melayu continues at Berita Harian, I cannot imagine how the future of Malay journalism will look like.

    So, I’m appealing to all of you reading this, to not only share this post but also, to write in to BH to provide your feedback. That is about all we can do.

     

    Source: https://abdillahzamzuri.wordpress.com

  • Warning! Racist Ah Pek In Jurong West Harassing Hijabis!

    Warning! Racist Ah Pek In Jurong West Harassing Hijabis!

    Untok wanita yang berhijab hatihati yeh bilerh berjalan Di jurong west

    just happen to me this morning ada apek cine nieeh main tarik ajerh tudung sesiape yang dyerh nampak . Boleh nampak that dyerh tak suke melayu . I’m consider lucky Pasal ada pakcik tolong if not taktahu laa perh Nasib I .

    Kesian. Makcik makcik tk bersalah terburai tudung yeh . I tk Sempat amek gambar apek tuu.. #12012016 . Don’t know if ada orng Sempat tk snap his pic .

    Waiting for it to kua manerhmanerh berite soo semuerh Muslims be alert .

    ***

    Muslimahs donning hijab around Jurong West area should be careful

    Just happen to me this morning…there was an ah pek who tugged at the tudungs of anyone he see. Can see that he doesn’t like Melayu. I’m consider lucky because there was a Pakcik who help me  if not i don’t know what could have happen to me.

    So pitiful those makcik-makcik innocent had their tuung taken off. I didn’t manage to take a pic of the ah pek.#12012016 ..Don’t know if other manage to take his pic.

    Waiting for it to come up in whichever news so that all Muslims can be alert

     

    Source: Nor Hanis